DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR 
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS 

S. "N. D. NORTH, DIRECTOR 



SPECIAL REPORTS 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 

1904 




WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 
1905 



1 



DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR 
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS 

S. N. D. NORTH, DIRECTOR 



SPECIAL REPORTS 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 



1904 




WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 



iiti, 



Wi 



\906 



D.ofO. 



^J 



<5 



CONTENTS. 



Page. 

Letter of transmittal 5 

Introductory 9 

Summary of results - - - - - - 1 1-24 

Growth of benevolent institutions 11 

Geographical distribution of all institutions 14 

Distribution of all institutions according to form of management 14 

Number of inmates of all institutions 14 

Eatios of inmates and admissions to the general population 15 

Financial statement for all institutions 17 

Comparative cost of maintenance of public, private, and ecclesiastical institutions 18 

Annual subsidies to benevolent institutions from public funds 20 

Income from pay cases in all institutions 21 

Summary of financial statement for all institutions, by classes 23 

Orphanages and children's homes. 24-30 

Inmates - 28 

Sex of inmates 29 

Cost of maintenance 29 

Subsidies from public funds 29 

Income from pay inmates 30 

Day nurseries .- 30-32 

Hospitals - 32-36 

Number of patients - 33 

Number on medical staff 34 

Number of nurses and training schools for nurses.,.. 34 

Cost of maintenance 34 

Subsidies from public funds 35 

Income from pay patients 35 

Dispensaries 36, 37 

Permanent homes 37-42 

Number of inmates 40 

Number of inmates and admissions per 100,000 of population 40 

Sex of inmates 41 

Cost of maintenance 41 

Subsidies from public funds , 41 

Income from pay inmates 41 

Entrance fees 42 

Temporarjr homes 42-48 

Number of inmates 46 

Eatios of inmates and admissions to population 46 

Sex of inmates 46 

Cost of maintenance 47 

Subsidies from pubhc funds 47 

Income from pay inmates 47 

Charges for maintenance 48 

Schools and homes for the deaf and blind 48-53 

Number of inmates 52 

Sex of inmates i 53 

Cost of maintenance 53 

Subsidies from public funds 53 

Income from pay inmates 53 

(3) 



4 CONTENTS. 

GENERAL TABLES. 

Page. 

Table 1. — Orphanages, children's homes, and nur.series 56-127 

Table 2. — Hospitals and dispensaries '. 128-219 

Table 3. — Permanent homes for adults, or adults and children 220-265 

Table -t.— Temporary homes for adults and children 266-295 

Table 5. — Schools and homes for the deaf and blind - 296-805 

INDEX. 

Classes of institutions, by states and territories .- 307, 308 

Aljthabetical index of all institutions = 308-335 



LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL. 



DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR, 

Bureau of the Census, 
Washington^ D. C. , October llf,^ 1906. 
Sir: 

I have the honor to transmit herewith a report on the benevolent institutions of the United States, issued in 
accordance with the provisions of section 7 of the act of Congress of March 6, 1902. 

The inquiry was conducted under the direction of Mr. John Koren, expert special agent, who is responsible 
for the method pursued and the analytical treatment of the results. 

The report treats of the operation of benevolent institutions, including the movement of institutional 
population during 1904 and financial statistics for 1903, with special data relating to the institutions classified as 
orphanages, hospitals, permanent and temporary homes, and schools and homes for the deaf and blind. An 
important feature of the analysis*is a comparison of the institutions of each class under public, private, and 
ecclesiastical management. The report forms a complete handbook and directory of special usefulness in 
organized or individual philanthropy. 

The work of collection and compilation was performed b}^ the regular clerical force of the Bureau, under 
the supervision of Mr. William A. King, chief statistician for vital statistics. For the completeness of the list 
of institutions and the accuracy of the returns credit is due to Mr. John H. Garber, who had immediate charge 
of the force engaged. 

Very respectfully, 




Directo7\ 
Hon. Victor H. Metcalf, 

Secretary of Commerce and Labor. 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS 



(7) 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



By John Koren, Expert Special Agent. 



INTRODUCTORY. 

The fundamental purpose of the present volume, 
which may be designated as a statistical directory of 
benevolent institutions in the United States, is three- 
fold: First, to supply information concerning the kind 
and extent of the activities of such institutions, includ- 
ing the movement of institutional population and cost 
of maintenance; second, to supply a reference book of 
practical utility to charit}' workers; and third, to sup- 
ply information upon which to base any special inquiries 
that may be demanded in the future concerning partic- 
ular groups of benevolent institutions and their inmates. 

At the census of 1890 information relating to inmates 
of public and private benevolent institutions was secured 
upon a schedule which also included inmates of alms- 
houses. Except for a separate tabular presentation, 
the two groups were not ditferentiated, but treated alike 
as paupers. Under the law governing the Twelfth Cen- 
sus the enumeration of special classes could not be 
undertaken until the statistics of population, vital 
statistics, agriculture, and manufactures had been pub- 
lished; consequently, the services of census enumer- 
ators were not available, and it became necessary to 
obtain the desired information direct from the institu- 
tions themselves. 

Experience in 1890 demonstrated that even with the 
aid of decennial census machinerv there remained many 
institutions concerning the inmates of which no infor- 
mation could be secured. The chief reason for this 
failure appears to have been the general reluctance of 
officials of private institutions to disclose the histor}' of 
persons in their care; and no doubt this reluctance was 
felt all the more because of the method of investigation 
which reduced all the inmates of benevolent and chari- 
table institutions to the level of paupers. In view of 
the limited sources of information, it became impera- 
tive, therefore, to abandon, so far as benevolent insti- 
tutions were concerned, the line of investigation fol- 
lowed in the Eleventh Census, and make the institutions 
themselves rather than the personal statistics of inmates 
the special objects of inquiry. 



It was believed that an accurate statistical presenta- 
tion of the main features and activities of benevolent 
institutions would not onlv afford a survey of this field 
of charit}^ which hitherto has been unobtainable, but 
would also result in a reference handbook of much 
practical value to persons engaged in philanthropic 
work. However desirable and interesting a specialized 
inquiry might be concerning the different classes of 
persons in receipt of benefactions from institutions, it 
was recognized that efforts in this direction would hardly 
prove successful unless based upon a work dealing with 
the general subject. 

The present census act strictly limits the collection 
of statistics of the special classes to inmates of institu- 
tions. Inquiries concerning recipients of ordinary out- 
door relief and benevolent activities outside institutions 
are thus debarred. 

In the collection of the statistical material the prob- 
lem of exclusion was hardly less formidable than that 
of inclusion. If it was desirable to include every 
benevolent institution deserving the name, it was 
equally desirable to omit all institutions of an essen- 
tiallv noncharitable character, or of a nature which 
could not be determined precisel}^ Moi-eover, itvwas 
not contemplated to give an account of almshouses, 
public and private hospitals for the insane, and schools 
for the feeble-minded, as these three groups have been 
separately enumerated b}" the Bureau of the Census 
and will form the basis of special reports. Finall}^, 
institutional activities of an occasional character or 
confined to a brief part of the year could not be con- 
sidered. 

Under the definition adopted, institutions have been 
considered as benevolent if supported, wholly or in 
part, bv public taxation, private endowment, or sub- 
scriptions, donations, and other forms of gift, for the 
benefit of the sick, aged, and needy. This definition 
did not, however, invariabh' provide a clear line of 
demarcation. There are institutions of a mixed charac- 
ter which, although more or less actively concerned in 
charit}" work, are sustained chiefl}^ through the income 
from pay patients. Not a few hospitals belong in this 

(9) 



10 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



category, and also other institutions, both permanent 
and temporary. In some instances tlie combination 
of educational work and institutional care made the 
classification doubtful. In all such cases it seemed 
better to give the term "benevolent institution" a 
broad interpretation rather than to omit mention of 
institutional charities possessing some local importance. 

Furthermore, certain groups of establishments have 
been included which, while devoted to benevolence, 
may in some respects lack ordinarj^ institutional fea- 
tures.' Such, for instance, are the numerous free dis- 
pensaries whose beneiiciaries can not strictly be called 
"inmates," as they are almost exclusively outdoor 
patients. In another view, the dispensaries are an inte- 
gral part of the institutional medical charity of the 
country, and should be grouped with the hospitals. 
Obviously, dispensaries known to be simply feeders to 
money making institutions have not been given a place. 

In like manner, a presentation of the benevolent 
activities of the many so-called day nurseries seems 
requisite to a complete view of the charity extended to 
children outside of private homes. Yet these day nurs- 
eries are not institutions in the sense that the}^ provide 
permanent conveniences for the care of children. 

Concerning institutions for the blind and for the deaf 
and dumb, the question may be raised whether many of 
them should not be regarded as educational rather than 
as benevolent institutions, according to the current clas- 
sification in the reports of the Commissioner of Educa- 
tion. Such of them as are conducted under state super- 
vision form a link in the public school S3\stem and should 
not, it is held, be grouped along with institutions whose 
inmates subsist on public or private bounty. Although 
it must be clearly recognized that the primar}^ object of 
these institutions is to provide an education and not a 
charit}^ they are nevertheless maintained for the benefit 
of special classes in the community and possess all the 
essential attributes of establishments devoted to benev- 
olent work in the way of providing free care and main- 
tenance. The omission of such establishments would 
render this volume incomplete for purposes of refer- 
ence. Special schools which do not at the same time 
provide a home for the classes under consideration 
have not been included. 

In general, it should be understood that persons 
enumerated as inmates of benevolent institutions are 
not necessarily recipients of charity in the ordinary 
sense, much less paupers. Many institutions, particu- 
larly hospitals, are resorted to as a matter of conven- 
ience by persons who pa}^ liberally for what they receive. 
This fact, however, does not make these institutions 
themselves less benevolent in character, nor demand that 
those who pay be differentiated from those who do not. 

The rule has been strictly adhered to of excluding all 
establishments operated for private profit and those 
which are ostensibly charitable but whose dealings 
seem fairly open to question. As a result, hundreds of 



institutions originally listed, especially sanitariums, 
infirmaries, and homes of various kinds, have been 
omitted from consideration. In all doubtful cases in- 
quiry was directed either to the institution officials or 
to other persons in authority, accompanied by the nec- 
essary explanations. Yet the fact that an institution 
has been enumerated as benevolent in this report does 
not carry any specific guaranty of its character, since 
that could be secured only by personal knowledge of 
several thousand institutions scattered all over the 
United States; therefore, in this initial attempt to dis- 
tinguish between interested and disinterested benevo- 
lence, judgment ma}'^, in a few instances, have erred in 
spite of much precaution. 

The extent of the information generally obtainable, 
rather than that which might be desirable, determined 
the scope of the inquiries. A complete enumeration 
of institutions being the chief desideratum, it was nec- 
essary to limit the inquiries to such elementary matters 
as all could understand. It should be remembered that 
this report is based on voluntary statements concern- 
ing institutional operations made by officials, many of 
whom lacked the aid of systematic records and there- 
fore were not prepared to state even the simplest facts. 
Moreover, official requests for information are not 
regarded by all managers of public and private insti- 
tutions as something demanding compliance, or even 
attention, if they involve unremunerative labor. Con- 
siderations of this nature necessitated the adoption of 
very simple schedules, dealing with general features 
and with the population of each institution as a whole 
rather than as individuals. 

For the purpose of inquiry the institutions were 
divided into five classes: First, orphanages, children's 
homes, and nurseries; second, hospitals and dispen- 
saries; third, permanent homes for adults, or adults 
and children; fourth, temporary homes for adults and 
children; fifth, schools and homes for the deaf and blind. 
A special schedule was prepared for each group. The re- 
sults are exhibited under the same general classifications. 
Although some of the groups, notably the permanent and 
the temporary homes, were made to comprehend a variety 
of institutions as regards object, management, and char- 
acter of the population, it seemed preferable not to 
attempt to subdivide them. This could not have been 
done with scientific precision. In many instances the 
information at hand was too vague; in others the' 
diversified nature of the institution might entitle it to a 
place in more than one of several subgroups; and, 
finally, some institutions were found to be in a state of 
transition. At best, a more detailed classification would 
have been somewhat arbitrary and therefore open to 
criticism. 

There remains in the United States a total of 85 in- 
stitutions, presumed to be benevolent and to be still in 
existence, but from which it proved impossible to secure 
the required information. Of these, 26 are supposed 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



11 



to be orphanages, 41 hospitals and dispensaries, 12 per- 
manent homes for adults, or adults and children, and 
6 temporary homes for adults and children. Some of 
these 85 institutions are probablj^ defunct or in the 
process of dissolution; in regard to others it may be 
doubtful whether the}' should be classified as benevo- 
lent; and still others have not an all the year round 
existence. 

The figures, in detail, for the five classes of institu- 
tions are presented in the general tables which follow 
the text. The institutions of each class are given, in 
alphabetical order, by states and territories, under the 
proper localities, which are also arranged alpha- 
betically. 

A complete alphabetical index of all institutions, by 
classes, follows the general tables. 

STTMMARr OF RESULTS. 

Groioth of henevolent institutions. — Of the 4,207 in- 
stitutions of all kinds in the United States enumerated 
in this report, 2,166 are known to have been in exist- 
ence in 1890. There were doubtless many in existence 
in 1890 which since have been discontinued, for the 
census of that year makes mention of 2,664 institutions, 
though details are given for but 1,858. How many 
came into being during the period from 1890 to 1903, 
only to disappear after a brief struggle for existence, is 
unknown. The short life of a multitude of small estab- 
lishments is hardly less remarkable than the number 
which arise year by j^ear. 



Of the institutions accounted for in this report, 2,004 
were founded between 1890 and 1903, inclusive. As 
indicated in Table i, their growth has been spread 
quite uniformly over the thirteen j^eai-s. Examined 
by groups, it is seen that the hospitals easil}^ take 
first rank, with an increase of 822; next come orphan- 
ages and children's homes, with an increase of 377; and 
third, tlie permanent homes for adults, or adults and 
children, with an increase of 356. In regard to the 
geographical distribution of new institutions, the in- 
crease in the number of hospitals is rather more marked 
in the old and thickly populated communities than in 
the 3^ounger ones. This is likewise true of permanent 
homes for adults, and quite naturally, since the majoritj^ 
of them are designed for aged people. The growth of 
orphanages, on the other hand, is most notable in states 
somewhat deficient in benevolent institutions of other 
kinds. No doubt one reason for this is the noninstitu- 
tional policy pursued in regard to dependent children 
in some of the states. 

The schools and homes for the deaf and blind, being 
mostly under state control, increase in number but 
slowlj' in comparison with institutions for the other 
classes, which generally owe their inception to private 
initiative. The occasional founding of state establish- 
ments for the deaf and blind also illustrates the policy 
prevailing in the different states in regard to these 
members of societ3^ 

The growth of benevolent institutions from 1890 to 
1903, inclusive, is shown in the following table: 



Table I.— NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS OF EACH CLASS FOUNDED IN EACH YEAR, FROM 1890 TO 1903, INCLUSI\'E. 



YEAR WHEN POUNDED. 



Aggregate 1.. 

Pounded 1890-1903. 

1890 



Year not stated. 



Orphan- 
i ages and 
children's 



138 


32 


189 


28 


13'^ 


34 


1K5 


30 


139 


81 


V?;?. 


23 


144 




14« 


38 


139 


11 



Permanent 
homes for 
adults, or 

adults and 
children. 



Temporary 
homes for 

adults and 
children. 



Schools 

and homes 

for the 

deaf. 



Schools 

and homes 

for the 

blind. 



Schools 

and homes 

for both 

deaf and 

blind. 



' Includes 35 institutions founded early in 1904. 



12 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Tables ii and in, which follow, present general sum- 
maries, showing, b}' states and territories, the number 
of institutions, the movement of institutional popula- 
tion, and financial data, with the number of inmates 
per 100,000 of population on December 31, 1904, and of 



admissions to institutions during the year per 100,000 
of population for the year. 

In Table ii the figures relate to all institutions re- 
ported. Table in gives the same data exclusive of 
schools and homes for the deaf and blind. 



Table II.— GENERAL SUMMARY FOR ALL INSTITUTIONS, BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



XUMBEE OP INSTIXrTIONS. 



STATE OR TEBKITORY. 



Total. ! Public. Private 



NUMBER OF INMATES— 



On Dec. 
31,1904.1 



Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 



Income from 
^ay inmates. 



Cost of main- 
tenance, . 
1903. 



s'fMBEE OF IN- 
MATES PER 100,000 
OF POPULATION— 



Admitted 
during 
1904.1 



United States . 



Alabama.. 
Arizoiifl — 
Arkansas . 
California. 
Colorado . . 



Connecticut . . 

Delaware 

District of Colv 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory. 

Indiana 

Iowa 



Kansas — 
Kentucky. 
Louisiana . 

Maine 

Maryland . 



Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire , 
New Jersey 



New Mexico . . . 

New York 

North Carolina 
North Dakota. - 
Ohio 



Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina. 

South Dakota.. 

Tennessee 

Te.xas 

■Utah 

Vermont 



Virginia 

Washington .. 
West Virginia. 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



4,164 
568 

3,792 
432 

2,509 

226 
20, 458 

236 
8,286 
4,109 

6, .577 

4|lU 
5,733 

IS, 532 
6,046 
4,350 



26, 775 
1,988 
1,246 

522 

2,550 

4,045 

525 

665 



5,253 
2, 295 
3,766 



41, 529 
1, 198 
37,953 



123, 242 
1,143 
17, 976 
22, 770 



2,012 
13, 170 
25,164 

3^275 

15,498 
14,152 

6,677 
24, 717 

1,008 



4, 291 

590 

3,952 



285 
8,199 
4,061 

6,417 
4,461 
4,309 
4,015 
5,571 



13,' 



791 
60, 704 
2,295 



166, 797 

500 

214, 512 



8, 250 
81,054 
15, 596 



500 
7,168 
9,644 



11, 725 
14, 473 
7,500 



33,853 
32, 380 
31, 330 
1,002,284 
310, 980 



13, 860 
190, 247 
284, 573 



1,258,668 

531,494 

502, 996 

8,153 

522, 232 



1, 313, 014 
74, 647 
21,428 



126, 080 
237,507 

71, 149 
344, 240 

21,419 



181,655 
91, .536 
183,239 
2, 807, 474 
787, 306 

1, 042, 825 

847i 792 



1,171,174 

4, 158, 575 
1,165,243 
1,012,963 
96, 492 
1,538,354 

882, 421 
394,225 
16, 200 
249, 415 
1,558,042 



26, 974 
145, 553 
6,474,888 
435, 014 
152, 169 

125, 755 



143, 716 

764, 772 
407,581 
214, 241 
1,095,495 
34, 549 



4o5. 4 
231.1 
205. 4 



119.3 
151. 4 
125. 2 
168.7 



268.4 

1. 674. 
271.6 

3. 429. 1 
2, 546. 4 

4,261.0 

626.0 

12,716.6 

341.0 

352. 4 

812.3 

2,357.4 

238.8 



6, 998. 3 
1,198.3 
1, S48. 8 



1,964.6 
700.7 
21.3 

ll! 992! 9 

1,101.1 

6,607.4 

245.5 

617.8 

2,964.7 

32.5 
8,311.2 

2i 314! 3 
127.4 



744.3 

1,197.3 

940. 5 



2. 424. 2 
642.7 

1, 112. 1 
962. 1 



Exclusive of dispensaries and nurseries. 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



13 



Table III.— GENERAL SUMMARY FOR ALL INSTITUTIONS, EXCLUSIVE OF THOSE FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND, 

BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States . 

Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS. 



n 


11 


fi 


30 


9 


17 




34 


1 


■2 


7 


116 


1 


2 


J4 


47 



1 


6 


2(i 


267 




28 


'i 


11 





3 


II 


25 


11 


36 


2 


6 


1 


18 



NUMBER OF INMATES— 



3,743 

6,253 
4,213 
5,110 
4,017 
5,441 



1^924 
1,067 



Admitted 
during 
1904.1 



4,992 
2,295 
3,587 
54, 450 
15, 029 

41,475 
1,198 
37, 901 



122, 687 
1, 123 
17, .552 
22, 724 



2,308 
514,015 

2] 231 
128, 731 



4,026 

590 

3,780 



13, 432 
5,395 
3,800 



2,783 

3,507 

429 

679 



from pub- 
lic funds, 
1903. 



Ill, 985 

500 

140, 412 



45! 650 
239, 475 



6,091 

826, 001 

44, 682 

7,900 



Income from 

pay inmates, 

1903. 



298,232 
14, 185 

125, 376 
21, 370 
61,465 



104, 922 
107, 332 
76, 809 
147,559 
350,196 

1,225,996 

530, 443 

502, 996 

8,153 

520, 912 



2, 721, 545 
40, 159 
49, 068 
710,432 

3,919 
92, 886 
1, 304, 422 
74, 647 
21, 128 



Cost of main 

tenance, 

1903. 



284, 195 

.51,218 
8,549,135 

44,690 
971, 161 
683, 018 

698, 311 
507, 216 
502, 648 
681,824 
1, 104, 873 

4, 009, 315 



363,921 
341, 807 
16, 200 
249, 415 
1,508,042 

276,598 

12,933,671 

181, 444 

71,832 

3,555,159 



122, 265 

6, 157, 130 

415, 014 

127, 318 



721, 122 
386,054 
169, 641 



NUMBER OF IN- 
MATES PER 100,000 
OF POPULATION— 



46.1 
121.7 

50.1 
859.2 
448.3 

409.7 



154.2 

410.6 
174.7 
273.1 
552. 3 
421.3 

438.2 
211.9 
194.5 
27.9 
260.0 

825.9 



374.2 
748.6 
85.4 
64.0 
555.4 



102.5 
139.7 
194.7 

306.6 
341.0 
67.2 
305.5 



255.0 
1, 674. 

258.7 
3,411.7 
2, 541. 5 

4, 255. 4 

626.0 

12, 699. 2 

338.0 

346.1 



768.9 

658.6 

1, 466. 1 

1,077.5 

2,873.9 



1,101.1 

5,602.0 

239.7 



18.5 
8,301.2 
2, 825. 6 
2, 312. 8 



799.2 
2,420.0 

621. 8 
1, 105. 1 

962.1 



Exclusive of dispensaries and nurseries. 



14 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Geographical distrihutionofall institiLtions. — In some 
instances the proportion of the 4,207 benevolent insti- 
tutions found in the individual state bears a close rela- 
tion to its population, but there are many striking- 
exceptions. Taking as an illustration the 15 states 
having- the largest number of institutions, the following- 
order and rank as to population on July 1 , 1904, are 
obtained:^ 

Rank of specified states according to number of benevolent institutions, 
and also ctccording to population: 1904- 



STATE. 


Number 
of benev- 
olent 

institu- 
tions. 


Rank 
accord- 
ing to 
number 
of benev- 
olent 
Institu- 
tions. 


Rank 
accord- 
ing to 
popula- 
tion. 




659 
409 
305 
267 
257 
162 
153 
140 
117 
117 
117 
86 
86 

83 


1 
2 
3 
4 
5 

9 
9 

12 
12 
14 
14 










7 


Ohio 


4 








15 




21 




6 








26 


Michigan 


9 




29 








11 




5 







That the number of benevolent institutions in a com- 
munity is in many cases determined by other factors 
than the number of persons in that community becomes 
even more apparent when a state like Colorado, with 
69 institutions and less than 600,000 inhabitants, is 
compared with Arkansas, which has only 27 institutions 
and a population more than twice as large. On the 
whole, it is doubtless true that the proportion of insti- 
tutions established for the benefit of the sick and de- 
pendent denotes progress in the care of these classes 
rather than their excessive number in the communit}^ 

Distribution of all institutions according to form of 
management. — For the purpose of distinguishing- be- 
tween the kinds of control exercised over institutions, 
as well as between the sources of support upon which 
they chiefly depend, the 4,207 institutions have been 
grouped under three heads: 1, public; 2, private; 3, 
ecclesiastical. The first group comprises all those 
directly supervised and maintained by the Federal 
Government, individual states, or civil divisions of the 
latter; the second, all those managed by private cor- 
porations and not subject to the control of any general 
bod}" or organization, though a few establishments 
maintained b}- fraternal orders have been included; and 
the third, all institvitions directh^ supervised and sup- 
ported by religious denominations, orders, or groups 
of churches. 

^ The rates and ratios in relation to population given in this 
report are based upon estimated populations. For yearly rates, 
such as admissions during 1904, the estimated population of July 1, 
1904, is used. To show the relation of the population of institu- 
tions on December 31, 1904, to the general population, the latter has 
been estimated as of the same date. 



Of the 4,207 benevolent in.stitutions considered in 
this report 485 are designated as public. The state of 
Ohio possesses the largest number of public institu- 
tions, followed by New York, Indiana, and Pennsyl- 
vania, in the order named. The preponderance of such 
establishments in Ohio and Indiana is due to the sj^stem 
of county homes for indigent children. The scarcity 
of institutions maintained at public cost in many com- 
munities points, among other things, to the fact that 
the care of the sick is largely a private enterprise, the 
communities contributing- their share through subsidies 
to private institutions. 

Under private control are 2,359, or 56.1 per cent of 
the total, while 1,363, or 32.4 per cent, are managed, if 
not exclusively supported, by religious denominations, 
orders, or groups of churches. A more detailed inquiry 
would probably reveal a larger percentage of institu- 
tions owing- their inception and maintenance to church 
bodies. The activity of the churches in charitable work 
of the kind under consideration is particular!}' notable 
in some of the newer communities. Thus in Idaho, 
Oklahoma, Oregon, and Washington about one-half of 
all the benevolent institutions are denominational in the 
sense that they have been organized and are main- 
tained by the churches. In the Southei'n states, on the 
other hand, with the exception of Louisiana, the pro- 
portion of institutions under church management is 
comparativel}^ insignificant. 

The following- table shows the number of benevolent 
institutions under ecclesiastical control and the per 
cent they form of all benevolent institutions for each 
of the twelve states in which they are most strongly 
represented: 

Fer cent which benevolent institutions under ecclesiastical control form 
of cdl benevolent institutions, for specified states: 1904- 





BENEVOLENT INSTI- 
TUTIONS UNDER 
ECCLESIASTICAL 
CONTROL. 


STATE. 


Number. 


Per cent 
of all be- 
nevolent 
institu- 
tions. 




45 
43 

120 
59 

216 
49 
36 
36 
47 

108 
58 


52.3 






Illinois . 


46.7 


Missouri 


42 1 






California • 


32.0 




30.8 








28.4 




27.0 




26.4 




19.0 







Nuriiher of inmates of all institutions. — As shown in 
Table ii the total population of benevolent institutions 
on January 1, 1904, was 283,809. During the ensuing 
twelve months 2,040,372 persons were admitted, and 
on the last day of 1904 there remained 284,362 inmates. 
Owing- to the impossibility of securing- accurate reports 
of population from some institutions the enumeration 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



15 



is not quite complete. The establishments for which 
figures are lacking are, however, among the least im- 
portant as to size. Could their population have been 
ascertained, the three totals given above would have 
been somewhat larger, particularl}'' the number of ad- 
missions and the number of inmates remaining at the 
end of 1904. But the statistics given are sufficient to 
illustrate the size and movement of the institutional 
population. It should be observed that they are ex- 
clusive of the 156 dispensaries and the 166 nurseries. 
Neither class of institutions can be said to have inmates 
in the ordinary sense of the term; moreover, in many 
instances, no count is made of the individuals fre- 
quenting them. 

The number of admissions during the year is ex- 
traordinarily large and appears altogether out of pro- 
portion to the year's increase in the number of in- 
mates. In other words, there were more than seven 
times as many persons admitted to benevolent institu- 
tions in the course of the twelve months as there were 
in them on the first and last da3^s of the year. The gain 
in population of the institutions for the year 1904 is 
represented as 553, but this is probably considerably 
lower than a perfect enumeration would have disclosed, 
as more institutions failed to report the number of in- 
mates than to state population at the beginning of the 
year and the number of admissions. 

While the annual increment of the population in be- 
nevolent institutions doubtless is greater than that in- 
dicated in the table, it probably falls much below 
popular estimates. 

The movement of institutional population is greatest 
in the hospitals. In 1904 this class of institutions 
reported more than one-half of the total admissions 
(1,064,512). Second in importance are the temporary 
homes, to which there were 868,657 admissions, or 
about three times the number of inmates on the speci- 
fied dates. Although the orphanages and permanent 
homes report, respectively, 70,825 and 29,353 admis- 
sions, their daily population is known to be largely in 
excess of these numbers. The institutions for the deaf 
and blind likewise display a comparative stability 
in population, the number of admissions in the course 
of the year being about one-half of the number of 
inmates on either of the census dates. 

Ratios of inmates and admissions to the general pop- 
idation. — For the whole of the United States the num- 
ber of inmates of benevolent institvitions in each 100,000 
of population on December 31, 1904, was 347, and the 
number of persons admitted during the year in each 
100,000 of population was 2,509.6. So far as the indi- 
vidual state or territory is concerned these proportions 
are clearly determined not so much by the number of 
institutions as by their kind. States with a preponder- 
ance of institutions having a stable jDopulation, such as 
orphanages and homes for the aged and incurable. 



naturally show a higher proportion of inmates to pop- 
ulation on a given date than a state whose institutions 
are mostly in the hospital class. On the other hand, 
the ratio of admissions to population is largely influ- 
enced by the extent of hospital conveniences, and where 
these are especially abundant the state will rank accord- 
ingly. Oregon furnishes an illustration in point. In 
ratio of inmates of institutions on December 31, 1904, 
to the general population, it stands twenty-fifth in the 
order of states, but in ratio of admissions to the gen- 
eral population during 1904 it stands third. 

In order to facilitate comparisons the following table 
is given, in which the states and territories haA^e been 
arranged in order of rank, both as regards the number 
of inmates on December 31, 1904, in each 100,000 of 
the general population, and the number of persons ad- 
mitted during 1904 in each 100,000 of the general pop- 
ulation: 



States and territories ranked according to number of inmates of benevo- 
lent institutions on December 31, 1904, o,nd the number of persons 
admitted during the year 1904 pe.r 100,000 of popidation. 



: TEKEITOKY. 



United States.. 

District of Columbia. 

California 

New York 

Ohio 

Maine 

Colorado 

Massachusetts 

Maryland 

Pennsylvania 

Connecticut 

Kansas 

Rhode Island 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

IlllQois . . ."- 

New Mexico 

Washington 

Montana 

Wisconsin 

Virginia 

Indiana 

Delaware 

Louisiana 

Missouri 

Oregon 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Kentucky 

Vermont" 

Nebraska 

Iowa 

Utah 

Tennessee 

Nevada 



Texas 

Arizona 

South Dakota 

Idaho 

North Carolina 

Wyoming 

Georgia 

West Virginia 

South Carolina 

North Dakota , 

Arkansas 

Florida , 

Alabama , 

Indian Territory 



Oklahoma . 



Number 

of in- 
mates on 
Dec. 31, 
1904, per 
100,000 
of popu- 
lation.! 



374.2 
360.4 
347.3 



205.4 
19.5. 7 
194.7 



168.7 
151.4 
132.8 
125. 2 
121.7 
119.3 
118.8 
113.6 



Rank, state ok tekbitory 



United States.. 

District of Columbia 

New Jersey , 

Oregon 



New York 

Connecticut 

California 

Ohio 

Maryland 

Pennsylvania . . . 

Colorado 

Washington 

Illinois 

Rhode Island 

Montana 

Minnesota 

Missouri 

Arizona 

Louisiana 

New Hampshire. 

Michigan 

Utah 



New Mexico. . . 

Maine 

Iowa 

Wyoming 

Vermont 

Idaho 

Virginia 

Kansas 

Nebraska 

Texas 

Indiana 

Kentucky 

West Virginia . 

Delaware 

Tennessee 

North Dakota . 
South Dakota . 



Arkansas 

Alabama 

North Carolina .'. , 
Indian Territory , 

47 Mississippi 

48 I South Carolina . . . 

49 I Oklahoma , 

50 Nevada 



Number 

admitted 
during 

1904 per 
100,000 

of popu- 
lation.! 



12, 716. 6 
11, 992. 9 
8,311.2 



3,429.1 
2,964.7 
2, 876. 8 
2, 827. 8 
2, 546. 4 

2. 424. 2 
2,357.4 

2. 314. 3 
1, 964. 6 



1. 674. 

1. 477. 8 

1. 332. 9 
1, 198. 3 
1,197.3 

1. 112. 1 
1,101.1 
1,079.4 

963.9 

940:5 
812.3 
800.9 
784.0 



475.4 
352.4 
341.0 
271.6 



170.4 
127.4 
32.5 
21.3 



'■ Exclusive of dispensaries and nurseries. 



16 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



The unique place occupied by the District of Colum- 
bia at the head of both columns is, of course, not attribu- 
table soleh" to the unusual extent of local institutional 
activity, but rather to the fact that the District is 
practically identical with the city of Washington. At 
the same time the District, as the seat of government, 
has attracted institutions through a liberal policy of 
subsidies. Besides, it contains a very large Federal 
institution, the National Soldiers' Home, with more than 
900 inmates. To compare the District of Columbia with 
other states in which the ratio of institution inmates to 
the general population is diminished bj^ a large rural 
population would, therefore, be distinctly misleading. 

By the foregoing arrangement, California is first 
among the states and territories in the ratio of institu- 
tion inmates to general population on the date specified, 
having proportionately twice as man}^ as all but the 
first nine states. And among the first twenty-five are 
the other young states, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, 
Washington, Montana, and Oregon. Again, among the 
first twenty-five in number of admissions to institutions 
per 100,000 inhabitants are Oregon, which stands as 
number 3, Colorado, Washington, Montana, Arizona, 
Utah, and New Mexico. The fact deserves mention, 
however, that in some of the newest communities, for 
instance, Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico, many of the 
hospitals are maintained by mining corporations and 
are not intended for the general public. 

Although the number of admissions to institutions 
per 100,000 inhabitants is largely governed by existing 
hospital provisions, the extent of the latter does not 
always appear to stand in direct relation to the per- 
centages of the urban population found in the different 
states. If that were the case, Rhode Island would stand 
at the top of the list instead of fourteenth. New Jerse}^ 
would move down a few places, Oregon be relegated 
from the third to the twentieth place, etc. Yet in 
many instances there is a fairly close correspondence 
between the relative strength of the urban population 
and the ratio of admissions to benevolent institutions. 
Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Maryland, 
Connecticut, and several other states furnish illustra- 
tions in point. 

The exclusion of the institutions for the deaf and 
blind (Table in) in no wise disturbs the above 
deductions. 

Table iv contains a summary exhibit of inmates of 
all institutions, by classes, according to the form of 
management, with the percentages of each class found 
in institutions designated as public, private, or eccle- 
siastical. 



Table IV. — Inmates of all institutions, by classes. 



CLASS OP INSTITUTION. 



All 

All orphanages 

All hospitals 

All permanent homes 

All temporary homes. 

All institutions for 

deaf and blind 

All classes 

Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical 

All orphanages 

Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical 

All hospitals 

Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical 

All permanent homes 

Public .- 

Private 

Ecclesiastical 

All temporary homes 

Public , 

Private 

Ecclesiastical 

All institutions for deaf and 
blind 

Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical 



NUMBER OP INMATES— 



71, 427 
78, 501 
25, 841 

15, 153 

283,809 



9,513 
30, 497 
52, 877 



20, 607 
25, 486 
25, 334 



46, 513 
16, 451 
15, 537 



Admit- 
ted. 

during 
1904. 



70, 825 

1,064,512 

29,353 

868, 657 

7,025 

2, 040, 372 



112, 467 
483, 419 
272, 771 



92, 289 
71, 530 
80, 346 
25, 466 

14, 731 

284, 362 



92, 052 
85, 086 
107, 224 



9,327 
30, 224 
52,738 



24, 001 
23, 965 
23, 564 



48, 060 
16, 944 
15, 342 



PEECENTAGE OF 
INMATES IN EACH 
CLASS— 



35.5 
100.0 



21.0 
19.8 

100.0 



Ad- 
mitted 
during 

1904. 



8.5 

52.2 
1.4 
42.6 

0.3 

100.0 



10.1 
45.5 
44.4 



50.8 
27.6 
21.6 



32.4 
25. 1 
28.3 



100.0 



10.1 
57! 1 
100.0 



How preeminently the care of persons in benevolent 
institutions, as measured either by the number of in- 
mates on the given dates or b}'- the number of persons 
admitted during the given period, is a matter of private 
charity in the United States is perhaps the most striking 
fact brought out in Table iv. About 70 per cent of the 
institutional population found on a particular date and 
about 80 per cent of all admitted in a year are beneficiaries 
of private charity (including, of course, that dispensed 
by the churches) as distinguished from maintenance 
solely at public cost. It is clear that the establishment 
and support of orphanages, hospitals, and temporar}' 
homes is left largely to private initiative. Permanent 
homes, measured by the number of inmates, are more 
generally made a matter of public concern, while most 
of the deaf and blind provided for in institutions are 
cared for by the public authorities. 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



17 



Of the three general classes of institutions considered 
in the table, the percentages of inmates both at the be- 
ginning and end of 1904: are largest for those under 
ecclesiastical supervision. This is chiefl}^ attributable 
to the large number of orphanages maintained by 
churches. In point of admissions private institutions 
lead, because of the many hospitals under this foi-m of 
control. 

Judged b_v number of inmates and admissions, the 
orphanages and children's homes under public manage- 
ment are of relatively little importance. This form of 
institutional charity is largely left to private initiative, 
since public institutions claim but 10 per cent of tlie 
number of inmates and 10 per cent of the admissions. 
Although particularly a concern of the churches, the 
orphanages under denominational management, while 
containing more inmates on January 1 and December 
31, of 1901, than both the public and the private insti- 
tutions combined, show a smaller percentage of admis- 
sions than the private class alone. This circumstance 
suggests that private orphanages are used more liberally 
as receiving homes from which children are distributed 
among families. It is interesting', also, to note that in 
point of permanent population the orphanages show a 
larger percentage than any other group of institutions, 
having about 32 per cent, closely followed by the per- 
manent homes, with more than 27 per cent, and the hos- 
pitals, with about 25 per cent. On the other hand, so 
far as admissions are concerned, the percentage orphan- 
ages contribute to the total for all institutions — 3.5 per 
cent — seems surprising!}^ low. 

Undoubtedly the hospital care of the sick is becom- 
ing more and more a public undertaking. But at the 
present time about two-thirds of the patients receive 
treatment in hospitals managed by private corporations 
and denominational bodies, the former slightly leading 
in number of patients on the census dates and mark- 
edly in number of admissions. More than one-half of 
the admissions to institutions are to hospitals. 

The permanent homes form a singular exception, 
inasmuch as those designated ''public" show percent- 
ages of inmates and admissions more than twice as 
large as those under private and ecclesiastical control 
combined. When not provided for in almshouses, the 
aged, incurable, and other needy persons who make 
up the bulk of the population of the permanent homes 
are generally supposed to be cared for b}^ private insti- 
tutions Dr organizations. The contrar}^ fact to be 
deduced from Table iv is attributable to the extensive 
provisions for this class made in a few states, and will 
receive further explanation in the analysis of the 
permanent homes, by states. The stability of the pop- 
ulation in the permanent homes is indicated by the 
percentage of admissions, which is but 1.1 of the total 
number of admissions to all institutions, while a little 
30952—05 2 



more than 27 per cent of all inmates are to be found 
in them at a given time. 

The difference between the percentage of inmates in 
public temporary homes and the percentage of those 
in private and ecclesiastical institutions of this class, 
and the disproportionate number of admissions to the 
public institutions, are explained by the fact that most 
of the latter are municipal lodging houses that are 
practically without inmates who remain longer than a 
night. The var3dng activities of institutions grouped 
as temporar}^ homes also account for the circumstance 
that the population of the homes under ecclesiastical 
control appears to be more stable than that of the same 
class of homes under private management. 

Institutional provisions for the deaf and blind, being 
chiefly of an educational nature, are naturally for the 
greater part of public origin. The public institu- 
tions for the deaf and blind contain more than 70 per 
cent of the inmates of all such institutions, and show 
more than 86 per cent of all admissions. The number 
of deaf and blind under the care of ecclesiastical 
institutions is almost a negligible quantity. It is 
true, however, that the deaf and blind under institu- 
tional care are far less in number than an}' of the other 
classes. 

Financial statement for all institutions. — Statements 
were sought from each institution covering: 1, the 
amount of annual subsidies from public funds; 2, the 
amount of income from pay inmates during 1903; and 
3, the cost of maintenance during 1903, exclusive of 
improvements. Entirely satisfactory responses could 
not always be secured. A total of 13 institutions did 
not report the amount of annual subsidy- from pub- 
lic funds, 225 omitted to give income, if any, from pay 
inmates, and 211 failed to supply cost of maintenance. 
The groups of institutions entering into these totals 
will be shown later. Aside from a not uncommon re- 
luctance on the part of institutions to give even the 
general facts concerning income and cost, it appears 
that some institutions actually keep no adequate records, 
while others depend chiefly upon donations of all kinds, 
the value of which is not easil}' translatable into dollars 
and cents. It must not be understood, however, that 
the absence of statements greatl}' influences the totals 
indicated in Table ii. As a matter of fact, most of the 
institutions from which financial statements are lacking 
are among the smallest of their kind. For general pur- 
poses the statistics of the extent to which institutions 
are subsidized out of public treasuries may be con- 
sidered complete. The total showing the amount of 
income from pay inmates would not have been materially 
increased by the addition of details for the 225 institu- 
tions for which returns are missing, as many of these 
institutions receive no revenue whatever from that 
source, and still others do not appear to regard it as a 



18 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



factor of consequence. The cost of maintenance as 
given is probably an understatement of from 1200,000 
to 1500,000. 

For the whole of the United States the gross cost of 
maintaining benevolent institutions in 1903, exclusive of 
improvements, was, according to Table ii, $55,577,633, 
or, excepting the cost of institutions for the deaf and 
blind (Table iii), $52,053,950. Deducting the income 
from pay inmates, the cost of maintenance was 
$■±0,729,125, and, exclusive of institutions for the deaf 
and blind, $37,306,135. 

The above gross cost of maintaining all benevolent 
institutions entailed a per capita expenditure of $0.70 
for the United States. 

Arranged in the order of per capita cost, the follow- 
ing order of states and territories, exclusive of the Dis- 
trict of Columbia, is obtained: 

States and territories ranked according to per capita cost of mainte- 
nance of benevolent institutions: 1903. 



TEKRITOEY. 



California 

New York 

Massachusetts . . 

Montana 

Colorado 

New Mexico 

Connecticut — 

Maine 

Pennsylvania . . 

Maryland 

Rhode Island... 

Ohio 

New Jersey 

Illinois 

Washington — 

Arizona 

New Hampshire 

Minnesota 

Kansas 

Wisconsin 

Missouri 

Michigan 

Vermont 

Utah 

Delaware 



Per 
capita 
cost, 
1903. 



0.67 
0.59 
0.52 
0.50 



0.41 
0.41 
0.41 



STATE OR TEKRITORY. 



Indiana 

Virginia 

Nevada 

Nebraska 

Louisiana __ 

Wyoming 

Oregon 

Iowa 

South Dakota . . . 

Kentucky 

Idaho 

North Dakota . . . 
West Virginia . . . 

Texas 

Florida 

Tennessee 

South Carolina . . 

Georgia 

North Carolina.. 

Arkansas 

Indian Territory 

Alabama 

Mississippi 

Oklahoma 



In many states there is a close relation between the 
gross cost per capita of maintaining benevolent institu- 
tions and the ratio of inmates to 100,000 of population 
contained in them. Excluding the District of Colum- 
bia, the following states hold exactly the same rank 
both as to per capita cost and ratio of inmates: Cali- 
fornia, New York, Colorado, Rhode Island, New Jersey, 
Illinois, Nebraska, and South Carolina, while in numer- 
ous instances there is a difference of but a point or two. 
In some apparent exceptions it will be found that the 
balance is restored when cost of maintenance is com- 
pared with ratio of admissions to population. Yet in 



other cases the relation under consideration is some- 
what remote. 

A presentation, by states, of the cost of maintenance 
for each inmate of institutions on the census dates or for 
each person admitted (a combination of the two being 
out of the question) would tend to misleading compari- 
sons. It is suggestive, however, to note that the annual 
expenditure per inmate on the basis of the number .re- 
maining in institutions oh December 31, 1904, appears to 
run from $189.50 in Arizona to $100.20 in Mississippi, 
where it is lowest. Corresponding figures for some 
other states make the rate for New Mexico, 1418.46; 
Montana, $384.34; Massachusetts, $307.31; Wyoming, 
$280.88; North Dakota, $265.44; Nevada, $257.14; 
Connecticut, $250.44; Pennsylvania, $240; and New 
York, which occupies thirteenth place in point of cost, 
$228.56. It is perfectly natural that a high rate of cost 
should be chiefly characteristic of the newer Western 
states. 

There is no uniform correspondence between the gross 
expenditures for benevolent institutions and the rank a 
state occupies in point of population, as maybe gathered 
from the following exhibit of 22 states, each of which 
contributed more than half a million dollars for the 
support of such institutions during 1903: 

Rank of sp)eciiied states according to aggregate cost of maintenance of 
benevolent institutions and according to population: 1903. 



Rank 
accord- 
ing to 
cost. 


STATE. 


Total cost of 

mainte- 
nance, 1903. 


Rank 
in 
popula- 
tion. 


J 


New York 


$13,531,292 

6,474,888 

4, 158, 575 

3,755,311 

3, 729, 675 

2,807,474 

1,558.042 

1,538,354 

1, 171, 174 

1, 165, 243 

1,095,495 

1,075,015 

1,042,825 

1,012,963 

787, 306 

764, 772 

764, 145 

746, 079 

714, 774 

700, 524 

603, 952 

538,248 










3 




7 














6 


California 


21 














Q 


Maryland 


26 














12 


Indiana 


g 














15 


Colorado 


31 














18 


Kansas 


23 












30 


21 


Kentucky 


12 















Comparative cost of maintenance of pullic^ private, 
and ecclesiastical institutions. — Table v shows the cost 
of maintenance of all institutions, according to their 
general classification, and Table vi of all institutions 
exclusive of those for the deaf and blind. 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



19 



Table V. — Cost of maintenance of all benevolent institutions, classified 
as public, private, and ecclesiastical, by states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States . 

Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory — 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota ;. 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



COST OF MAINTENANCE, 



181, 655 
91, 536 
183, 239 
2,807,474 
787, 306 

1,042,825 
80,577 

847,792 
96, 458 

331,362 

51, 218 

3, 755, 311 

47, 690 

1,075,015 

764, 145 

746, 079 



4, lo5, o7o 
1, 165, 243 
1, 012, 963 
96, 492 
1, 538, 354 

382, 421 
394,225 
16, 200 
249,415 
1,558,042 



13,531,292 

281, 444 

88, 924 

3, 729, 675 

26, 974 

145, 553 

6, 474, 888 



714, 774 
121, 761 
143, 716 

764, 772 
407,581 
214, 241 
1, 095, 495 
34,549 



17, Sll 
1,272,035 

18,000 
675, S19 
302, 444 

518, 383 
215, 158 
216, 378 
389, 028 
63,615 

1,038,636 

320i 439 



52, 130 
159, 191 
16, 200 
23, 000 



200, 212 
2,33.5,826 

125, 185 

27, 470 

1,960,222 

17, 877 
39, 664 

857, 478 
66, 000 

.59,127 

63, 442 
192, 882 
294, 954 
36,895 
18,829 



11,500 

58,-558 

27, 905 

1, 024, 585 



10,950 
1, 156, 2.59 

14.943 
185, 312 
204,171 

116, 435 
221,032 
168, 937 

787;U1 

2,461,892 

516,131 

233, 498 

6,921 

498, 258 



138, 



85, 792 

18, 464 

1, 110, 918 

2,792 

17,061 

4, 142, 789 

284, 922 

31, 882 

24, 400 
64, 539 
216, 810 
7.440 
99,950 



85,967 

23! 299 
766, 149 



130, 957 

25, 000 

156,423 

6,960 



22, 957 

1,327,017 

14, 747 



111,261 
167,762 
152, 933 



459,026 
23,419 
563,096 



1, 474, 621 
84,092 
61,160 

37, 913 
79, 527 
203, 010 
77, 426 
24, 937 



Table VI. — Cost of maintenance of benevolent institutions, exclusive of 
those for the deaf and blind, classified as public, private, and ecclesi- 
astical, by states and territories : 1903. 



: TERRITORY. 



■ United States . 

Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 



COST OP MAINTENANCE, 1903. 



115, 626 

91, 536 

102, 175 

,721,1,52 



51, 218 

3,549,135 

44, 690 

971, 161 



18, 159 
1,100 

50, 971 
930, 418 
151, 355 

193, 222 



17, 311 
,079,859 

18, 000 
571, 965 
221,317 



11, 500 
58, 558 
27, 905 
1, 024, 585 
381, 469 

632, 960 
.55, 577 

255, 7.53 
59, 237 

160, 178 

10, 950 
1, 142, 259 

11, 943 
185, 312 
204, 171 



22, 957 
1, 327, 017 

14, 747 
213,884 
257, 530 



Table Yl.r— Cost of maintenance of benevolent institutions, exclusive of 
those for the deaf and blind, classified as public, private, and ecclesi- 
astical, by states and territories: 1903 — Continued. 

COST OF JIAINTENANCE, 1903. 



TERRITORY. 



Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshiri 
New .Jersey 

New Mexico . . . 

New York 

North Carolina 
North Dakota.. 
Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania.. 
Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina 

South Dakota.. 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington . . . 
West Virginia.. 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



3698, 311 
507, 216 
502, 648 



1, 040, 958 

936, 141 

58, 340 

1,429,834 



16, 200 

249, 415 

1, 508, 042 

276,598 

12, 933, 671 

181, 444 

71, 832 

3, 555, 159 

9,097 

122, 265 

6, 157, 130 

415, 014 

127, 318 

103, 313 



721, 122 
386, 054 
169, 641 
1, 015, 832 
34, .549 



263, 038 
213,617 
28, 000 
371, 227 



106, 773 
16, 200 
23, 000 

266, 487 

200, 212 

2, 262, 315 

25, 185 

10, 378 



16, 376 
838,550 
46,000 
34, 276 



S116, 435 
221,032 
168, 937 
271, 228 
759, 273 



28,911 

6,331,036 

85, 792 

18, 464 

1, 106, 681 



24, 400 

64, 539 

216, 810 

7,440 



74, 724 

155, 105 

6,319 



$111, 261 
167, 762 
150, 933 
40, 268 
320,418 

658, 047 
261,789 
4.59, 026 
23, 419 
563, 096 



47, 475 
, 340, 320 
70, 467 
42, 990 
658, 535 



88,828 

1, 474, 621 

84,092 

61,160 

37, 913 
79, 527 
203, 010 



96, 712 
201, 619 

47, 666 
313, 549 



Of the aggregate co.st of maintenance 29.3 per cent 
was expended for public institution.s, i3.5 per cent for 
private institutions, and 27.2 per cent for ecclesiastical 
institutions. These per cents remain nearly the same 
when the institutions for the deaf and blind are excluded. 

Delaware is the only state that does not support a 
public institution of any character besides the alms- 
houses and hospitals for the insane. The fact that the 
amount of public moneys voted for institutional pur- 
poses in some states exceeds the total expenditures for 
private and ecclesiastical institutions may indicate a 
paucity of conveniences of this character, as in the case 
of Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Tennessee, or 
that the state undertakes special functions which else- 
where are left to private enterprise, as in the case of 
Indiana, Ohio, Kansas, and Wisconsin. In 17 states, 
including some in which benevolent institutional work 
has attained its largest development, the expenditures 
for the maintenance of private institutions are larger 
than those for public institutions. 

On the other hand, the aggregate cost of ecclesias- 
tical institutions is larger than that of institutions under 
private management in the following 20 states and ter- 
ritories: Alabama, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Min- 
nesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New 
Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Car- 
olina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Washington, and 
Wisconsin. 



20 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Annual subsidies to benevolent institutions from jpvhlic 
funds. — In all of the states and territories, except 
Idaho, Nevada, and Oklahoma, part of the cost of 
private and ecclesiastical institutions is defraj^ed from 
public funds. Frequently contributions are made by 
the local communitj^ or subsidies are voted by the 
legislatures. Both methods of subsidies involve a 
recog'nition of the fundamental duty of the community 
to provide institutional care for its sick and dependent 
members, but also indicate, in a more or less pronounced 
manner, a preference for a vicarious performance of 
this duty. Tables vii and viii show the amount of 
annual subsidies from public funds given to private 
and to ecclesiastical institutions inclusive and exclusive, 
respectively, of those devoted to the deaf and blind. 
The sums, no doubt, vary considerably year by year, 
but the period investigated is sufficiently representative 
for purposes of comparison. 

Table VII. — Annual payments from public funds to all benevolent 
institutions, classified as public, private, and ecclesiastical, by states 
and territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY, 



United States . 



Arizona 

Arliansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 



99,588 
12,271 

135, 383 
, 32Q, 415 

217, 756 



145, 578 

17, 311 
1,355,413 

26, 250 
756, 873 
318, 040 

532. 833 
254,338 
251, 758 
434, 678 
325,277 



,188,615 
401,641 
327, 911 
70, 182 
498, 043 



59, 417 
160, 965 
16, 200 
39, 604 
419, 551 

215,369 
5, 407, 278 

163, 818 

28,420 

2,014,383 



84, 188 

1,100 

132, 035 

, 016, 740 



, 222 



351, 633 
30, 261 
100, 301 

17,311 



518, 383 
215, 158 
216, 378 



6,822 

8,425 
34, 380 
18, 150 
37, 500 
179, 717 

143,343 
13, 517 
4,863 
3,430 
12, 620 



200, 212 

2,335,826 

125, 185 



857, 478 
66, 000 
59, 127 



3,618 

1,251,904 

37, 945 



4,000 

1,016,959 

42, 182 



10, 300 
11,171 

48 
198,275 



49, 658 
'2i,'776 



6, 025 
4,800 
17, 230 



2,091 
60, 924 
2,500 
6,000 



Table VII. — Annual jjayntents from pmblic funds to all benevolent 
institutions, classified as public, private, and ecclesiastical, by states 
and territories: 1903 — Continued. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



South Dakota 
Tenne.s.see . . . 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington . 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin ... 
Wyoming 



28, 570 



863, 442 

294] 954 
36, 895 
18, 829 



10,425 
7,877 
7,500 
1,748 
340 



Table VIII. — Annual payments from public funds to benevolent insti- 
tutions, exclusive of those for the deaf and blind, classified as public, 
private, and ecclesiastical, by states and territories: 1903. 



TERRITORY. 



United States . 



Alabama.. 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas . 
Cahfornia. 
Colorado . . 



Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia. 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory . 

Indiana 

Iowa 



Kansas 

Kentucky. 
Louisiana . 

Maine 

Maryland . 



Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota — 



Missouri 

Montana . . 
Nebraska . 
Nevada . . 
New 1 
New Jersey- 



New Mexico . . 

New York 

North Carolina 
North Dakota . 
Ohio 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina. 

South Dakota . . 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 



Virginia 

Washington.. . 
West Virginia. 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



33, 559 
12, 271 
54, 319 
1, 240, 093 
165, 167 

305,207 

500 

492, 045 

21,065 



485, 065 
157, 602 
218, 158 
415,978 
264, 657 

,114,062 
281, 404 
251,089 
32, 030 
392, 270 

40, 917 
108, .547 
16, 200 
39, 604 
379, 551 

215, 3B9 

, 926, 529 

63,818 

11,328 

,844,104 



27, 148 

439, 867 
98, 022 
54, 751 

551,541 
28, 570 



18, 159 
1,100 

50, 971 
930,418 
151,355 

193, 222 



12, 016 
'28,"676 



1, 079, 859 
18, 000 
571,965 
221,317 

470, 615 
118, 422 i 
182, 778 



371,227 

33, 630 
106, 773 
16, 200 
23, 000 
266, 487 

200, 212 

, 262, 315 

25, 185 

10, 378 



33, 720 

8, 250 
59, 278 



8, 425 
34, 380 
18, 150 
37, 500 
158, 030 




6, 025 
4,800 
17, 230 



8,423 

7,287 



2,427 
11,539 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



21 



In proportion to the aggregate cost of maintenance 
the ecclesiastical institutions receive a larger share of 
public bount}^ than the private; and in 10 states, namely, 
Alabama, California, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, New 
Mexico, New York, South Carolina, Texas, and Wis- 
consin, the former get the larger part of the actual 
amount of subsidies. 

A clearer view of the relation of expenditures to sub- 
sidies is presented in the following statement: 

Aggregate cost of benevolent iiiditutions other than public, amount granted 
them from public funds, and per cent of cost covered by public grants, 
b;i states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States . 



Alabama.. 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas . 
California. 
Colorado.. 



Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia . 

Florida 

Georgia 



Illinois 

Indian Territory. 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 



Kentuclty 

Louisiana 

Maine..-. 

Maryland 

Massachusetts. 



Michigan . . 
Minnesota . 
Mississippi . 
Missouri ... 
Montana . . . 



Nebraska , 

New Hampshire , 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York , 



North (Carolina 
North Dakota.. 

Ohio 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania ... 



Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina. 
South Dakota . . 

Tennessee 

Texas 



Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington. 



West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



97,467 

90,436 

51,204 

1,790,734 



496, 159 
66, 197 
231, 061 



311,496 
1, 107, 559 
3, 119, 939 

781, 968 
692. 524 
30, 340 
1,061,354 
330, 291 

235,034 

226, 415 

1, 251, 555 



156,259 

61,454 

, 769, 453 

105, 889 
, 617, 410 



124,887 
292,980 
302, 505 

122,390 

468, 6.54 

6,319 



3,226 



15,400 
11, 171 
3,348 
309, 675 
13, 812 

166, 797 

500 

214, 512 

3,274 

45, 277 

83, 378 
8,250 
81,054 
15, 596 
14, 450 



35, 380 
45, 650 
261, 662 
149, 979 



1,774 

16,604 

113, 064 

15, 157 

3,071,452 

38, 633 

950 

.54, 161 

6,091 

44,682 



8,319 
11,725 
14,473 



Per cent 
of total 
cost of 

mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



19.6 
0.6 
43.2 



27.8 
20.3 
3.4 



10.1 
11.0 
14.7 
23.6 
4.8 

2.3 



The differing policies in the states with reference to 
annual payments out of public funds to private and 
to ecclesiastical institutions do not conform generally 
to the extent of institutional operations, in the sense 
that dependence upon this form of income is greatest 
where the pressure upon these charities appears to be 
greatest. There are some notable exceptions, for in- 
stance, New York, Maryland, Connecticut, Indiana, 
and Pennsylvania. In each of these states the percent- 
age of total cost of maintenance derived from public 
funds is from 19.2 upward. On the other hand, states 
like Massachusetts, Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, Michigan, 
Colorado, Minnesota, etc. , each of which has an exten- 
sively developed system of institutions, get onl}^ from 
1.1 to 5.0 per cent of the cost of maintenance from 
public treasuries. To facilitate comparisons the states 
and territories have been arranged in the following- 
statement in the order of the percentages of cost of 
maintenance derived from public funds: 



Staies and territories ranked in descending order of per cent of cost of 
maintenance of benevolent institutions other than public covered by 
grants from, public funds: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



District of Columbia 

Indian Territory 

New York 

North Carolina 

Maryland 

Indiana 

New Mexico 

Connecticut 

Georgia 

Pennsylvania 

California 

Alabama 

Maine 

Mississippi 

Arizona 

Rhode Island 

Loui.siana 

Kentucky 

New Jersey 

South Carolina 

New Hampshire 

Vermont 

Arkansas 

Kansas 



Per cent of 
cost of 
mainte- 
nance from 

public 

subsidies, 

1903. 



24.7 
23.6 
20.3 
19.8 
19.6 
19.6 
19.2 
17.3 
15.8 
14.7 
13.3 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



West Virginia. 

Oregon 

Wyoming 

Tennessee 

Florida 

Massachusetts 
Washington .. 

Virginia 

Illinois 

Iowa , 

Ohio 

Colorado 

Michigan 

Texas 



Per cent of 
cost of 
mainte- 
nance from 

public 

subsidies, 

1903. 



Mimtanu 
Mis-oiiri 



ikota. 



Minnescita 

Wisconsin 

South Dakota - 

Nebraska 

Delaware 

Utah 



Income from yay cases in all institutions. — Table ix 
shows, by states and territories, the income from pay 
cases in all institutions, and Table x gives the same data 
for institutions exclusive of those for the deaf and blind. 



22 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table IX. — Income from pay cases in all benevolent institutions, classi- 
fied as -public, private, and ecclesiastical, by states and territories: 
1908. 



STATE OR TERBITOKY. 



United States . . . 

Alabama 

Arizona 

Arl^ansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia . . 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



INCOME FROM PAY CASES, 1903. 



303, 606 
14, 185 

130, 706 
21,370 
61, 465 

21, 979 
1,571,813 

13,860 
190,247 
284, 573 

104, 922 
107, 332 
76,916 
149, 159 
359,203 



531, 494 

502, 996 

8, 1.53 

522, 232 

1.51, 846 
164,811 
709 
112, 925 
372, 097 

71,367 
2,731,879 
40, 159 
49, 068 
711,707 



1,313,014 
74, 647 
21, 428 



217, 058 
97, 128 
46, 367 

126, 080 
237,507 

71, 149 
344, 240 

21,419 



3,448 
1,500 



13, 943 



27, 748 
12, 285 
4,154 



313, 811 

91, 679 

2, 5.52 

142, 815 



2,040 

, 914, 814 

22, 474 

12,944 



11, .599 
874, 734 
59, 355 



94, 571 
75,115 



31, 051 
22, 930 
19, 781 
464, 633 
132,735 



14, 079 
1, 022, 876 

13, .590 
132, 188 
161, 339 

51,420 
28,021 
42,747 
21, 025 
102,452 

315, 574 

149,568 

386, 000 

2, 101 



190, 730 

28, 365 
811,594 
17, 685 
36,124 
291. 904 

3, .519 
81, 287 
424, 337 
15,292 
10, 3.50 

34,567 



157, 306 
26, 305 
241, 687 



Table X. — Income from pay cases in benevolent institutions, exclusive 
of those for the deaf and blind, classified as public, private, and 
ecclesiastical, by states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OK TERRITORY. 



United States . 

Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory — 

Indiana 

Iowa 



PAY CASES, 1903. 



33, 853 

32, 380 

31,330 

1, 002, 204 



298, 232 
14,185 

125, 376 
21, 370 
61,465 

21, 979 
,565,313 

13, 860 
190, 247 
284,573 



10,977 



2,802 

9,319 

7,648 

530, 457 

160,942 

225,917 



,574 



31,051 
22,930 
19, 781 
464, 633 
132,735 

60,626 
4,314 
67, 177 
714 
23, 365 

14,079 
, 022, 876 

13, 590 
132, 188 
161,339 



Table X. — Income from pay cases in benevolent institutions, exclusive 
of those for the deaf and blind, classified as public, private, and 
ecclesiastical, by states and territories: 1903 — Continued. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Kansas , 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada , 

New Hampshir 
New Jersey 

New Mexico . . 

New York , 

North Carolina 
North Dakota . 
Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . 
Rhode' Island . 
South Carolina 

South Dakota . 
Tennessee — 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington . . 
West Virginia . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



INCOME FROM PAY CASES, 1903. 



1, 225, 996 
530, 443 
.502, 996 



151, 846 
164,711 
709 
112, 925 
369,895 

71,367 
2,721,545 
40,1.59 
49, 068 
710,432 

3,919 
92, 886 
1, 304, 422 
74, 647 
21, 128 



217, 058 
93, 034 
46, 367 

126,080 
235, 158 

71, 149 
344, 160 

21,419 



157, 012 

2b, 317 
3,500 
2,589 



2,040 

1,911,007 

22, 474 

12, 944 

394, 012 

400 



S51, 420 
28, 021 
42, 640 
21, 025 

102, 402 



805,067 
17,685 
36, 124 

291,904 

3, .519 
81,287 
424,337 
15,292 
10,350 

34, 567 
50,606 
139, 299 



31, 509 • 
157,306 

26, 305 
241, 687 



For the whole of the United States 26.7 per cent of 
the aggregate cost of maintenance in 1903 was covered 
by income from pa}^ cases. Of the total amount re- 
ceived from this .source ($14,848,608) 3.5 per cent was 
reported from public institutions, 51.7 per cent from 
private, and 44.8 per cent from ecclesiastical institu- 
tions. In proportion to the cost of maintenance the 
income from inmates was considerablj^ larger in ecclesi- 
astical institutions than in private, a fact which must be 
attributed to the numerous hospitals under church pat- 
ronage that are largel}^ maintained by the revenue from 
patients. 

There is onl}^ one state without a public benevolent 
institution, but as shown in Table ix, in 15 states there 
is no income whatsoever from inmates of public institu- 
tions. The explanation is that these states provide in- 
stitutions at public cost only for the deaf and blind, 
to whom support and education as a rule are given 
gratis. In fact, less than one-fifth of the income from 
pay cases received at public institutions is secured by 
all the public institutions for the deaf and blind. 

The fact that the income from pay inmates of the pub- 
lic institutions of Massachusetts is much more than twice 
as large as that of an}' other state, and forms 30.1 per 
cent of the total for the United States, must be ascribed 
chiefly to the public hospitals in this commonwealth 
and the legal provisions made for the recovery of the 



SUMMARY OF RESULTS. 



23 



cost of maintenance of indigent patients fi'om the city 
or town in whicti the}' have a domicile. 

As regards both private and ecclesiastical institu- 
tions, the hospitals report most of the income from pay 
cases. It will be observed that among the states in 
which denominational institutions obtain a larger share 
of income from pay cases than those designated as pri- 
vate the following are conspicuous: Alabama, Arizona, 
Arkansas, Illinois, Montana, New Jersey, South Caro- 
lina, Tennessee, Washington, and -Wisconsin. The 



large total given for Illinois ceases to be surprising 
when it is known that this state exceeds even New 
York in the number of hospitals under church manage- 
ment and has twice as manj' as any other state. 

Summary of financial statement for all institutions, 
hy classes. — Table xi gives totals and percentages of 
aggregate cost of maintenance, annual subsidies from 
public funds, and income from pay cases for all public, 
private, and ecclesiastical institutions, by classes of 
institutions. 



Table XI— FINANCIAL EXHIBIT FOR ALL INSTITUTIONS, BY CLASSES: 1903. 



CLASS OF INSTITUTION. 



Annual subsi- 
dies from pub- 
lic funds, 1903. 



Income from 
pay inmates, 



PERCENTAGE OF- 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



Annual 

subsidies 

from public 

funds, 1903. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



All orphanages 

All hospitals 

All permanent homes 

All temporary homes 

All institutions for deaf and blind . 

All nurseries 

All dispensaries 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical. 



All orphanages . 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical. 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical. 



All permanent homes . 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical. 



All temporary 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical. 



All institutions for deaf and blind . 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical . 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical . 



All dispensaries . 



855, 577, e 



10,050,587 
28, 200, 869 
9, 916, 180 
3,039,035 
3, 523, 683 

519! 620 

5.5,577,633 



2, 181, 784 
2, 276, 336 
188.077 
527; 081 
884, 772 
7,675 
23,501 

6,089,226 



le, 181, 484 
820, 096 
526, 055 
100, 693 
47,175 
139, 412 



16,263,958 
24, 163, 099 
15, 150, 576 



0) 

3, 623, 352 
2. 465, 874 



1, 414, 459 
4, 143, 677 
4,492,461 

28, 200, 869 



0) 
836,852 
1, 344, 932 



39,404 
382, 728 
611, 461 



6, 606, 085 
13,928,365 
7, 666, 419 

9, 916, 180 



0) 

1, 704, 992 
571, 344 



443, 540 
6, 312, 394 
5, 425, .550 



5, 776, 608 
3, 028, 160 
1,111,412 



69, 921 
1,314,860 
X 654, 254 



2, 313, 914 

1,047,265 

162, 504 



0) 
739,480 
145, 292 



18, 631 
71,999 
10, 063 



29.3 
43.5 
27.2 



41.2 
44.7 

100.0 



100.0 



2.3 
43.3 
54.4 

100.0 



100.0 



22.2 
100.0 



(1) 



100.0 



^^W6 
16.4 

100.0 



100.1 



3.8 
59! 2 
100.0 



51.8 
44.5 

100.0 



44.9 
100.0 



59.2 
40.8 

100.0 

18.5 
71.5 
10.0 

100.0 



Public 

Private 

Ecclesiastical . 



2,400 

129, 716 

7, 296 



Entire cost of maintenance is from public funds. 



The hospital class leads as to aggregate cost, a little 
more than one-half of the entire sum expended for the 
maintenance of benevolent institutions being for the 
benefit of the sick in hospitals. Of the total amount of 
annual subsidies, hospitals receive 37.4 per cent, and 82 
per cent of the entire income of institutions from pay 
inmates falls to the share of this class. In proportion 
to their activities, private hospitals receive a much 



heavier donation from public treasuries than hospitals 
under denominational management. On the other hand, 
in proportion to the aggregate cost of maintenance the 
ecclesiastical hospitals receive a greater income from 
pay patients than the private hospitals. 

Of the total cost of maintenance, 18.1 per cent was 
expended for the support of orphanages. Of the 
millions of dollars annually expended for the cost and 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



education of ©rphans and otherwise dependent children, 
44.7 per cent goes to the maintenance of those in insti- 
tutions under ecclesiastical control which, it should be 
observed, also obtain proportionateh^ a much larger 
share of the annual subsidies, and also a relatively 
larger income from inmates who pay something for 
their support. 

The third place in percentage of aggregate cost of 
maintenance is occupied by the permanent homes, which 
are supported at an annual cost of nearly ten million dol- 
lars, oi' onlj^ a very little less than the cost of all orphan- 
ages and children's homes. In proportion to the number 
of inmates cared for, the permanent homes are the most 
expensive of all institutions, a fact which is probably 
due partly to the character of the inmates and more 
especially to the circumstance that such a large group 
of these institutions is maintained at public cost. 
Only 3.1 per cent of the total annual subsidies is 
given to the permanent homes, and more than two- 
thirds of the amount was secured by private homes. 
The latter also show a larger percentage of income 
from pay inmates than the public and ecclesiastical. It 
should be remarked, however, that the tables include 
not a few institutions having a fixed entrance fee. 
This is notabh^ true of some homes for the aged. 

Considering the number of persons cared for in the 
course of a jea,r. the cost of supporting temporary 
homes is small, being but 5.5 percent of the aggre- 
gate for all institutions. As is well known, in many 
temporary homes the inmates receive board and lodg- 
ing in return for doing various kinds of work, not a 
little of which results in income, but not of the kind 
that can easily be put into terms of money, and for 
this reason the income from pay inmates appears 
smaller than it actually is. The temporary homes 
receive in cash from inmates only 3.5 per cent of the 
aggregate for all institutions. The proportionately very 
large percentage given to ecclesiastical institutions of 
the annual subsidies received by temjDorary homes is 
perhaps to be explained by the fact that the ecclesias- 
tical homes care for groups of unfortunates for whom 



not only the most effective appeal can be made, but 
who are in need of special influences that can not so 
easily be supplied by public institutions. 

A little more than three and one-half million dollars 
is annually devoted to the care of the deaf and blind 
in institutions, or 6.3 per cent of the total expended 
for all institutions. Except as thej^ are found in alms- 
houses and other special institutions, the deaf and blind 
are in man}" states exclusively, and in most states for 
the greater part, cared for at public cost. Ecclesiastical 
charity enters this field only to a very limited extent, 
and private institutions for the deaf and blind, although 
comparatively extensive in operations, are in numerous 
instances maintained only in the absence of provisions 
of a public character. For this reason, presumably, the 
private institutions for the deaf and blind succeed in ob- 
taining more than one-half of their cost of maintenance 
from public grants. 

Although the cost of maintaining daj^ nurseries is 
insignificant when compared with the other classes of 
institutions, the total expended for them in the year 
aggregates $327,659. This class of establishments is 
also made a beneficiary through public subsidies, but 
probably without exception these subsidies are contri- 
butions from the communities in which the nurseries 
are located. 

The actual cost of maintaining dispensaries is no 
doubt somewhat understated, because of the fact that 
many hospitals maintain out-patient departments, the 
cost of which is included in the general cost. The 
entire amount of public subsidies, namely, $23,501, 
voted to this class of institutions goes to those under 
private control. 

ORPHANAGES AND CHILDKEN's HOMES. 

Table xii gives, by states and territories, a sum- 
mary of the details presented in Table 1 for this class 
of institutions, with the number designated as public, 
private, and ecclesiastical, and the number of inmates 
and of admissions per 100,000 of population. 



26 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table XII.— ORPHANAGES AND CHILDREN'S 



STATE OR TEREITOBY. 



NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS. 



Total. Public. Private, 



NUMBER OF INMATES— 



On Jan. 1, 1904. 



Total. Male. ' Female 



United States . 



Alabama.. 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas.. 
California . 
Colorado . . 



Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia . 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory . 

Indiana 

Iowa 



5, 155 
791 

1,787 



1,066 
283 
468 
22 



Kansas 

Kentucky. 
Louisiana . 

Maine 

Maryland . 



Massachusetts. 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire , 
New Jersey 



New Mexico . . . 

New York 

North Carolina. 
North Dakota.. 
Ohio 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina. 



42 South Dakota . 

43 I Tennessee 

44 ; Texas 

45 Utah 

Vermont 



Virginia 

Washington . 
West Virginii 
Wisconsin... 
Wyoming . . . 



2,779 

326 
426 

965 
2,764 



2, 952 

82 

1,746 



13, 430 

545 

46 

4,454 

29 
134 
6,424 
485 
343 

48 
412 

122 

127 

390 
200 



2,025 
1,160 



3,195 

215 

1,312 



1 Includes 112 not reported by sex 

2 Includes 3,382 not reported by se 

3 Includes 119 not reported by sex, 
■• Includes 20 not reported by" sex. 



' Includes 92 not reported by sex. 
' Includes 222 not reported by sex 
Includes 80 not reported by sex. 



ORPHANAaES AND CHILDREN'S HOMES. 

HOMES, BY STATES AND TEREITOEIES. 



27 



NUMBEK OF INMATES— Continued. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Male. Female. 



Eemaining Dec. 31, 1904. 



Male. Female. 



Number 
of paid 
employ- 



Annual sub- 
sidies from 
public funds, 
1903. 



Income from 
pay :" 



NUMBEK OF INMATES 
PER 100,000 OF POPU- 
LATION— 



Admitted 
during 
1904. 



2,489 
1,095 



1,000 

275, 903 

4,200 



23, 826 
1,62C 
2,701 



2,286 
65,823 
18, 019 

48, 588 
5,957 
6,196 



15.1 
213.3 
157.8 

105. 5 
74.2 
203.0 



1,188 

410 

1,299 

5,443 
1,586 
' 1, 018 
104 
2,544 

179 
526 

554 
1,794 



587 

95 

6, 292 

61 

355 

10 4,786 





10, 074 

262 

50 



8,250 
2^500 



20, 500 
15,948 
9,150 
76, 048 



24, 907 
1,247 

7,670 

48 

255 

10, 418 

■ 753 

727 

101 

862 

1,061 



1,412 


13, 792 



1,705 
901 
451 
155 

1, 420 

164 
174 

407 
1,186 



124, 118 
19,679 
7,949 
2,101 
43, 518 



2,276 
107 

1,002 



15, 000 

950 

22, 723 



123, 200 

43, 757 
116, 458 
139, 084 

64, 009 
242, 037 

495, 480 
128, 217 
130, 822 
25, 619 
241, 496 

35, 995 
48, 279 
16, 200 
69, 357 
337, 341 



19, 644 

1,434,0.51 

106,415 

59, 907 

10, 000 
61, 157 
87,093 
10,640 
29, 091 



31,489 
19, 708 
126, 130 



41.9 
110.1 
48.9 



124.6 

50.2 
317.3 
61.7 
18.0 
175.1 



55.7 
153.6 
161.4 

50.9 



79 2 


m 


62.6 


23 


h->. 7 


24 


6.8 


25 


77.5 


26 


63.0 


27 



62.5 
233.4 
29.3 
2.5.6 
144.5 

11.5 
78.4 
71.1 
181.2 
17.7 



8 One public institution only. 

9 Includes 2,601 not reported by sex. 
'"includes 242 not reported by sex. 



'1 Includes 150 not reported by sex. 
1- Includes 167 not reported by sex. 
13 Includes 39 not reported by sex. 



28 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



About one-fourth of all the benevolent institutions 
in the United States are devoted to the care of orphans 
or other dependent children. Private and ecclesiastical 
bodies each control i78 establishments, and but 119 of 
the total are directly" under public management. In 
making comparisons it should be remembered that the 
details in regard to orphanages in the different states 
are more or less influenced by the prevailing policy 
regarding the care of children. If the institutional 
policy is general, the number, of institutions and in- 
mates,' cost of maintenance, etc., will be proportion- 
ately greater than in a state following a noninstitu- 
tional policv. In order to suppl}^ a perfect statistical 
picture of the care of dependent children, it would be 
necessary to account for all those placed in families 
without passing through institutions; but to do so was 
not within the province of this investigation. The 
state of Iowa may be taken as an example. It has but 
12 orphanages, while New Jersey, with a smaller popu- 
lation, supports nearly four times as man}^ Obviously 
it would be a mistake to conclude that the apparent lack 
of institutional provisions in Iowa indicates that the 
dependent children in this state are relatively so few, 
or that they are inadequately cared for. The explana- 
tion lies in the difference of method. Several other strik- 
ing contrasts of the same nature between states are 
furnished by Table xii. 

In many instances the actual number of children's 
institutions in a state is closelj'^ related to the number 
of its inhabitants; but there are significant exceptions, 
which suggest in some cases lack of adequate provision 
for dependent children, and in others that they are 
largely cared for outside of institutions. 

Indiana and Ohio are the only states having systems 
of county homes for children. As a result they are 
credited with nearly three-fourths of the children's 
homes maintained at public cost. Twenty-six states 
are without any public homes for children. In the 
following 22 states and territories the children's insti- 
tutions under church management exceed in number 
those controlled by private secular corporations: Ala- 
bama, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Illinois, 
Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, 
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New 
Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, 
South Carolina, Virginia, and Wisconsin. Arizona, 
Idaho, and W3'oming are as yet without any orphanages. 

Inmates. — It is of interest to compare the number of 
admissions to orphanages and children's homes during 



a year with the number of inmates on the census dates; 
in all cases where the former is larger, it is generally 
safe to infer that proportionate efforts are made to 
distribute children in homes, and vice versa. 

In order to facilitate comparison the states and ter- 
ritories have been arranged according to the number 
of admissions to children's institutions in 1901, and the 
number remaining at the end of 1901, as follows: 

States and territories ranked according to total number of adniissioyis 
to orphanages and children's homes during 1904, and cdso according 
to total number of inmates on December 31, 1904. 



\ Admit- 

Rank. ' state or teeritoey. i teddur- 

I ing 1904. 



United States., 

New York 

Illinois 

Ohio 

Massachusetts 

Pennsylvania 

California 

Missouri 

New Jersey 

Indiana 

Michigan 

Maryland , 

Louisiana 

Connecticut , 

Minnesota 

Kentucky 

Colorado , 

Wisconsin 

Kansas 

Rhode Island 

Texas , 

Iowa 

District of Columbia. 

Tennessee 

North Carolina 

New Hampshire 

Nebraska 

Georgia 

Maine 

Washington 

Virginia 

Oregon 

South Carolina , 

Utah 

Arkansas 

Alabama 

Indian Territory 

Montana 

South Dakota , 

Delaware 

New Mexico 

Mississippi , 

West Virginia 

Vermont 

Florida 

North Dakota 

Oklahoma 

Nevada 



18, 171 
7,587 
6,292 
5,443 
4,786 
3,404 
2,544 



1,299 
1,188 
1,028 
1,018 



Remain- 

STATE OR TERRITORY. ' ing DeC. 

31, 1904. 



United States.. 


92,289 


New York 


24, 907 
10,418 
7,670 
5 ''45 


Pennsylvania 

Ohio 


Illinois 






Massachusetts 


3,953 
o 934 








2 598 


Maryland 


9 165 






Connecticut ; . 


i;854 



Michigan 

Kentucky 

Wisconsin 

North Carolina 

Minnesota 

Iowa 

Georgia 

Texas 

New Hampshire 

District of Columbia. 

Virginia 

Tennessee 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

Colorado 

Maine 

Kansas 

Alabama 

Nebraska 

Delaware 

Washington 

Montana 

Mississippi 

Oregon 

Utah 

Indian Territory 

West Virginia 

Vermont 

Arkansas 

Florida 

New Mexico 

South Dakota 

North Dakota 

Nevada 

Oklahoma 



From the figures given it is already clear that whether 
considered by the number of inmates of orphanages on 
the given date or the number of admissions to them 
during the year, the totals bear no definite ratio to the 
population. This becomes much more apparent when 
the states are placed in the order of nuuiber of inmates 
and of admissions to each 1(»0.000 of general popula- 
tion, as shown in the next table: 



ORPHANAGES AND CHILDREN'S HOMES. 



29 



States and territories ranked according to number of inmates of orphan- 
ages and children's homes on December .3 1 , 1904, per 100,000 of pop- 
ulation, and also according to number of persons admitted during 
1904 per 100,000 of population. 



Rank. STATE OR tekkitory. 



Number 

of ill- 
mates on 
Dec. 31, 
1904, per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



United States. 

District of Columbia 

New York 

California 

New Hampshire 

Delaware 

Connecticut 

Ohio ! 

Maryland ! 

Rhode Island | 

Pennsylvania \ 

Nevada '■ 

Massachusetts 

Louisiana 

New Jersey \ 

Montana 

Indiana 

Colorado 

Illinois 

19 I Missouri 

"" Maine 

Utah 

Michigan 

Kentucky 

Minnesota 

North Carolina . . 

Washington 

Wisconsin 

Oregon 

Vermont 

South Carolina . . 

New Mexico 

Iowa 

Virginia 

Georgia 

Indian Territory 

Tennessee 

Kansas 

Nebraska 

Texas 

Alabama 

South Dakota . . . 

Florida 

West Virginia . . . 

North Dakota . . . 

Mississippi 

.Arkansas 

Oklahoma 



321.4 
317.3 
290.8 
229.4 
203.5 
188.7 
175.1 
172.5 
161.4 
153.6 
132.3 
129.0 
126.4 
124. 6 



57.2 
55.7 
51.9 



41.9 
40.3 
38.1 



18.9 
18.0 
16.2 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States 

New York 

California 

District of Columbii 

Rhode Island 

Massachusetts 

Colorado 

Illinois 

Ohio 

New Hampshire... 

Connecticut 

Maryland 

New Jersey 

Louisiana 

Oregon 

Utah 

Missouri 

Delaware 

Pennsylvania 

Washington 

Montana 

Indiana 

Michigan 

New Mexico , 

Kansas 

Maine , 

Minnesota 

Nebraska 

Kentucky 

Indian Territory ... 

Wisconsin 

South Dakota 

North Carolina 

Vermont 

Iowa 

Tennessee 

North Dakota 

Texas 

Nevada 

Virginia 

Georgia 

South Carolina 

Florida 

Arkansas 

Oklahoma 

Alabama 

West Virginia 

Mississippi 



Number 
admitted 
during 
1904 per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



213.3 

181^2 
179.2 
157.8 
145.1 
144.5 
130.1 
105. 5 
104.1 
87.0 
79.8 



15.1 
11.5 
10.6 
10.0 



In manj^ in,stances high ratics, both of inmates and 
of admissions to population, are traceable to the elabo- 
rate institutional provisions made for children. In 
other cases low ratios denote limited facilities in the 
shape of orphanages and homes rather than a proportion- 
ately small number of dependent children in the com- 
munity. But in still other instances the ratios shown 
are directly affected by the extent of the prevailing- 
home finding for children in contradistinction to purely 
institutional efforts. At the present time there is no 
means of determining just what certain ratios signify 
so far as some of the states doing the most enlightened 
work with children are concerned. Many of the ratios 
are modified b}^ such important factors as urban popu- 
lation, climatic conditions, etc.. which can not be con- 
sidered until more complete data are available. 



Sex of inmates. — Some institutions failed to report 
both inmates and admissions bj- sex, and the totals, 
therefore, are somewhat larger in each instance than the 
sums for males and females. This does not materially 
disturb the proportion of the sexes. A large majorit}' 
of the inmates of institutions on the two dates under 
considei-ation were males. The record of admissions 
shows the same preponderance of male children. When 
single states are considered it will be observed that the 
proportion of the sexes is practically the same in all 
states dealing with large numbers of dependent chil- 
dren. The occasional preponderance of female orphans 
and dependents is to be ascribed to the existence of 
large institutions which receive onlj^ girls. 

Cost of maintenance. — Reports of expenditures are 
lacking for 36 institutions. The total of $10,050,587, 
therefore, does not represent the entire cost of mainte- 
nance of children's institutions, although those not re- 
porting are among the smallest ones. Moreover, hun- 
dreds of orphanages are in constant receipt of donations 
of all kinds, the money value of which can not even be 
estimated. A closer view of the relative amounts spent 
for children's institutions in the various states and terri- 
tories is obtained from the table below. On the whole, 
the expenditures seem to be in fairly close correspond- 
ence to the number of inmates and admissions. 

States and territories ranked according to cost of maintenance of 
orphanages and children's homes: 1903. 



United States 

New York 

Pennsylvania 

Ohio 

California 

Massachusetts 

Illinois 

New Jersey 

Indiana . .". 

Maryland 

Missouri 

Connecticut 

Louisiana 

Minnesota 

Michigan 

Iowa 

Kentucky 

Rhode Island 

Georgia 

Dist. of Columbia.. 

Texas 

Virginia 

New Hampshire... 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 



2,820,993 

1, 434, 051 

912, 525 

515, 106 



320. 036 

242. 037 
241, 496 
204, 772 
139, 084 
130, 822 
128, 217 
126, 130 
123, 200 
116, 458 
106, 415 
102, 267 

89, 955 
87, 093 



3,357 



Maine 

North Carolina . 

Colorado 

Tennessee 

South Carolina . 

Nebraska 

Kansas 

Delaware 

Montana 

Alabama 

Washington 

Vermont 

Indian Territory 

Mississippi 

West Virginia . . 

Oregon 

Nevada , 

North Dakota . . 

Arkansas 

Utah , 

South Dakota . . 

New Mexico 

Florida 

Oklahoma 



Subsidies from jxiMic funds. — The amount contrib- 
uted from public sources to children's institutions in 
1903 was $2,181,781:, or 21.7 per cent of the total cost 
of maintenance. In Delaware. Mississippi, Nebraska, 
Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Utah no help of this kind 
was given. It is evident from the small amount of 



30 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



subsidies noted for some states that the contributions 
are of a local character; that is, they are payments made 
by the county, town, or municipality in return for care 
of children who are public charges. In other cases the 
amounts are grants from the public treasurj^ in lump 
sums. In illustration of the different policies observed 
in regard to appropriating monej^ for benevolent work 
for children, statistics for a few states may be cited': 

Cost of maintenance of orphanages and children's homes, amount of 
subsidies to them from public funds, and per cent such subsidies form 
of total cost, for specified states: 1903. 



California 

District of Columbia 

Illinois 

Louisiana 

Kentucky 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

New Jersey 

New York" 

Pennsylvania 

Virginia 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



2, 820, i 

1,434,( 

79, ■; 



15, 948 
20, 500 
76, 048 



497 

6,259 

158, 842 

32, 817 



Per cent 
of cost 
formed 
by sub- 
sidies, 
1903. 



26.5 
11.9 
11.5 
17.6 



In two of the states referred to above, namely, Cali- 
fornia and New York, more than one-half of the cost 
of maintaining children's institutions is paid out of the 
taxes, while in other states subsidies are almost entirely 
unknown and never voted by legislatures for the bene- 
fit of institutions not exclusively supported by the 
states. 

income from pay inmates. — A little more than one- 
tenth of the entire cost of maintaining orphanages and 
children's homes is covered b}^ income from pay inmates 
who contribute annually about one million dollars. It 
is not known what part of this income is contributed 
by relatives or friends of the children, and what part 
from public authorities who pay stipulated sums per 
week or month for the support of those who have be- 
come direct charges upon the community. In propor- 
tion to expenditures the amounts collected from inmates 
are smallest in the Southern and some of the newer 
Western states. 



The amount of income from pay inmates in children's 
institutions, together with the percentage it forms of 
the total cost of maintenance, is shown below for some 
of the states which receive the largest sums from this 
source : 

Income from pay inmates of orphanages and children's homes and per 
ceyit of cost of maintenance covered by such income, for specified states: 
1903. 



California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Illinois 

Kentucky ...... 

Maryland 

Massachusetts . . 

Michigan 

Missouri 

New Hampshire 

New York 

Pennsylvania . . 
Wyoming 



Income 
from pay 



18, 019 
48, .588 
82, 676 
11, 241 

124^118 
19, 679 
43, 518 
31, 883 

243, 934 
74, 256 
15,843 



Per cent 
of cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



12.8 
29.1 
23.7 
17.0 
9.7 
7.0 
25.1 
15.4 
18.0 



Adding together the amounts of total subsidies and 
of total income from pay inmates it is found that the 
sum equals 40 per cent of the total cost of maintenance. 

Paid employees to the number of 9,477 were engaged 
in the care of children in institutions. Of the large 
number of persons giving service without remuneration 
there is no count. 

DAT NURSERIES. 

Table xiii gives, by states and territories, a sum- 
mary of the details presented for this class of institu- 
tions in Table 1, with the number designated as private 
and as ecclesiastical. There are no public institutions 
of this class. 

This form of benevolence as yet occurs chiefly in a 
few Eastern states with large urban population, and is 
not found in 26 states. Of the 166 day nurseries 
accounted for in the table no less than 113 are main- 
tained in four states — Massachusetts, New Jersey, New 
York, and Penns3dvania. Thirty of the entire number 
are under church auspices and 136 are maintained by 
private organizations or individuals. 



DAY NURSERIES. 

Table XIII.— DAY NURSEEIES, BY STATES AND TERRITOEIES. 



31 



STATE OE TEERITORY. 



United States 



Alabama.. 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas . 
California. 
Colorado . . 



NUMBEK OF INSTITUTIONS. 



Total. Public 



NUMBER OP INMATES- 



On Jan. 1, 1904. 



Total. Male. Female 



Remaining Dec. 31, 1904. 



Total. Male. Female, 



Number 
of paid 



Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 
1903. 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance. 



Connecticut , 

Delaware 

District of Columbia . 

Florida 

Georgia 



. 1, 454 
1,551 



7,847 

"473 
719 
840 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory. 

Indiana 

Iowa 



Kansas — 
Kentucky. 
Louisiana . 

Maine 

Maryland . 



Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



6,020 
51, 785 



2,231 
'7"ii2 



Montana 

Nebraska , 

Nevada 

New Hampshire . 
New Jersey 



New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 
North Dakota.. 
Ohio , 



677 



1, 145 
"2,' 656' 

"3,"29i' 



152, 166 
700 

"is," 970 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania.. 
Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina. 

South Dakota.. 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 



,045 



Virginia 

Washington . . . 
West Virginia. 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



1 Includes 56 not reported by sex. 

2 Includes 21 not reported by sex. 

3 Not reported. 

* Includes 50 not reported by sex. 

The figures obtained in regard to inmates are per- 
haps somewhat vague, owing to the apparently slight 
efforts made at record keeping in some nurseries. 
The total number reported as inmates on January 1, 
1904, was 7,441, of which approximately one-half 
were in institutions in the state of New York. On 
December 31 of the same year there was an increase 
in attendance of 176, which is an understatement, 
for a large number of institutions failed to report 
this detail. 



5 Includes 12 not reported by sex 

6 Includes 6 not reported by sex. 
' Includes 9 not reported by sex. 



Of the total cost of maintenance in 1903 ($327,659) 
considerably more than one- half was disbursed for the 
support of the day nurseries in Massachusetts, New Jer- 
sey, New York, and Pennsylvania. Of these states New 
Jersey is the only one in which day nurseries received 
assistance from the state, the other notable beneficiaries 
being in Maryland and Tennessee. The total state 
grants amounted to $7,675. Generally subsidies under 
this head must be understood as coming from the local 
community. 



32 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



With some exceptions, it appears to be the general 
custom for parents or friends to make small paj^ments 
for the care given children in the nurseries. The 
total amount designated as income was $i7,l75, and 
would go but a small wa}' toward pa3-ing cost of main- 
tenance. 

To i'ttend to the wants of the children the services of 
680 paid empIo3'-ees were required. 



Table xiv gives, by states and territories, a summary 
of the details presented for this class of institutions in 
Table 2, with the number designated as public, private, 



and ecclesiastical, and the number of patients on De- 
cember 31, 190J:, and persons admitted during the year, 
per 100,000 of population. 

As there were excluded from this report, so far as it 
was possible to distinguish them, all institutions con- 
ducted for private protit, it follows that the number of 
hospitals given for any community represents only 
those of a distincth^ benevolent character and does not 
indicate the whole extent of existing hospital facilities. 
Thus Nevada is the onlj^ state not credited with a hos- 
pital, but presumably the need of hospitals for her 
small population is met by private enterprises not to 
be classed as benevolent. 



Table XIV.— HOSPITALS, BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



United States. 



Alabama . 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas . . 
California . 
Colorado . . 



Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia. 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 



Kansas . . . 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine .... 
Maryland 



Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota' 



Missouri . 



Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada.. 

New Hampshir 
New Jersey 



New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina . 
North Dakota . . 
Ohio. 



NUMBEK OF INSTITUTIONS. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS— 



4,513 
1, 569 
1,480 



Admitted 
during 
1904. 



2,277 
3,124 
48, 506 
13, 140 

17, 708 

988 

15,589 

1,786 

1,494 



11, 209 
19, 912 
6, 274 
28, 435 



mg 
Dec. 31 

1904. 



158 

257 

l!l76 



1, 042 

405 

1,621 

4,450 
1,269 
1,492 
152 
2,946 

460 
426 

"'229' 
2, 372 



0) 
365 
11,261 



NUMBER 0> 
MEDICAL 
STAFF. 



Num- 
ber of 
nurses. 



Num- 
ber of 
institu- 
tions 
main- 
taining 
train- 
ing 
schools 
for 



Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 



13,600 
11, 171 

2,048 


3,837 

93, 349 



4,600 
11,900 
10, 200 
33, 000 
126, 002 



8,277 
6. 895 



Income 

from pay 

patients, 

1903. 



32, 757 
32,360 
25,982 
811,809 
221,080 

204, 864 

7,524 

101,648 

18, 976 

58, 577 

21,979 
, 365, 205 

13, 590 
173, 797 
253, 598 

100, 182 
85, 424 
67, 9.58 
126, 771 
311, 706 

973,358 
457, 854 
472, 922 
6,052 
459, 893 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



76, 706 
90,436 
52, 670 
, 450, 123 
459, 970 



152, 017 

33, 907 
2, 165, 847 

14, 547 
255, 821 
343, 956 

184, 387 
253, 487 
260,345 
231,640 
719, 921 

2, 702, 646 
624, 343 
633, 076 
31,872 



NUMBER OF PA- 
TIENTS PER 
100,000 OF POPU- 
LATION— 



113.8 
18.4 

180.0 
196.8 



27.1 
238.3 
29.8 



Admitted 
during 
1904. 



234.5 

1, 660. 9 

225.3 

2!222!l 

1,816.9 
516.3 

'30.5; 5 



420.4 
592.0 



614.1 
494.9 



860.2 
1,171.8 

143.1 
1,524.3 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island... 
South Carolina . 

South Dakota . . 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia . . 

Wiscon.sin 

Wyoming 



2, 310 

573 
15, 023 



2,177 
246, 520 
4,110 
2,036 
51,997 

(') 

5,945 

124, 007 

9,249 

1,211 



10, 086 
712, 129 
23, 233 



725, .554 

liooo 

500 


9,034 


5,294 

9,575 
9,752 
6,000 
2,249 



268, 661 

6, 732, 983 

94, 911 

48, 154 

4,105 

72, 058 

3, 637, 671 

234, 044 

54, 349 

54, 313 
150, 073 
352, 416 
76, 626 
68, 914 



119, 235 
226, 767 

67, 565 
304, 278 

21,419 



324.1 
199.6 
11.2 



35.2 
54.6 
62.1 



1,858,9 

1,038.6 

3,166.3 

204.8 

548.1 

1,193.8 

(■) 
1,313.3 



.500.4 

061.3 

1,106.1 



HOSPITALS. 



33 



Specific conclusions drawn from the number of hos- 
pitals in different states in proportion to population 
would he meaningless so long- as it is impracticable to 
bring single institutions and their operations into com- 
parison. Clearly one hospital in a community may 
perform with even better success the work divided 
among three or more small institutions elsewhere. 
Yet the extent of the provisions made for the sick, as 
manifested by the number of hospitals, points not 
merely to the stress of life under urban conditions and 
the like, but to progress in humanitarian work. The 
table compels the inference that hospital facilities in 
many instances are not apportioned among states in 
accordance with needs, but reflect the extent of char- 
itable enterprise. 

Attention has been drawn already to the fact that 
some communities prefer to subsidize hospitals operated 
as private enterprises rather than to establish institu- 
tions of their own. This accounts for the proportion- 
ately small number of hospitals designated as public. 
Delaware, Idaho, Indian Territory, Kansas, Nevada, 
Oklahoma, Oregon, and Vermont are without them 
and in other states they are represented chiefl}^ by 
Federal institutions. The private hospitals outnumber 
the public by nearly four to one, and the ecclesiastical, 
the public by two to one. Although the hospitals under 
private management are about twice as numerous for 
the whole country as those under church control, the 
latter are in the majority in the following states: In- 
diana, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Washington, and 
Wisconsin. In all the Eastern states the conditions are 
reversed, but this must not be understood to signify 
less activity on the part of the churches; the charity 
simply does not take denominational form to as great 
an extent. 

Number of patients. — It has already been noted that 
the movement of population in hospitals is of some- 
what larger proportions than indicated by the totals in 
Table xiv. Forty-one hospitals did not make any 
return for the number of patients on hand January 1, 
1904:; twice as many failed to report admissions during 
the year, and even a greater number did not state how 
many patients remained at the end of 1904. Although 
the hospitals from which complete data could not be 
secured through any means within the reach of the 
Bureau of the Census are among the smallest, it is evi- 
dent that a perfect enumeration would have disclosed a 
larger gain in patients during twelve months, and that 
the admissions are understated probably by a few thou- 
sand. Nevertheless, the totals in question give an ade- 
quate picture of the benevolent work of hospitals, and 
indicate that at the two dates there were in the United 
States about 87 patients in hospitals to each 100,000 of 
population, while in the same number of inhabitants 
more than 1,300 were persons admitted to hospitals dur- 

30952—05 3 



ing twelve months. These figures would, of course, re- 
ceive substantial additions were all patients accounted 
for who frequent hospitals not supported through be- 
nevolence in some form. Yet the ratios per population 
would probably not be materially increased, for the 
hospitals not enumerated are almost exclusively given 
over to the care of the comparatively few rich or well- 
to-do. 

The relation between the number of hospitals in the 
different states and the extent of the facilities they 
provide will be more easily comprehended if the states 
are arranged in order of the number of admissions dur- 
ing 190i and number of patients remaining on Decem- 
ber 31, 1904, together with the number of hospitals, as 
follows: 

States and territories ranked according to number of persons admitted 
to hospitals during 1904, and also according to number of patients 
in hospitals on December 31, 1904. 



Num- 
ber of 
hos- 
pitals. 


STATE OR TERRITORY. 


Admitted 
during 
1904. 


Num- 
ber of 
hos- 
pitals. 


STATE OR TERRITORY. 


Remain- 

dSi, 

1904. 


194 


New York 

Pennsylvania 

Illinois 

Massachusetts 


246, 520 
124, 007 
85, 601 
73,485 
51,997 
50,014 
48,506 
38,345 
23,435 
22, 633 
22,356 
21,784 
19,912 
19, 718 
17,708 

131985 
13,936 
13, 140 
13, 110 
11,209 
11, 136 

9^249 
9,136 

6! 463 
6,274 
6,216 
5,945 
5,270 
4,591 
4,110 
3,792 
3, 359 
3,121 
2,990 
2,372 
2,277 
2,177 
2! 036 
1,736 

l!494 

1,211 

991 

988 

905 


194 
145 
74 
105 
93 
55 
50 
48 
32 
44 
59 
43 
32 
10 
28 
29 
41 
31 
31 

13 

23 
19 
9 
16 
13 
17 
12 
20 

17 
13 
19 

"9 
17 
7 
10 
6 
9 

6 

5 
3 

2 


1 


New York . 


15,668 
11,261 


145 
105 


Pennsylvania . . . 

Ohio 


93 


Illinois . . . 


5 344 




Massachusetts 

Missouri 


4,450 
2,946 
2,897 
2 372 


55 


Missouri 








48 


New Jersey 


New Jersey 


32 


Maryland 




i;62i 

1,492 

i;223 
1,176 
1,042 




Minhesota 










69 


Michigan 






















13 


District of Columbia. 


Kentucky 


878 






876 
823 
813 
759 


19 


Virginia.. 


q,p^ 








28 


Washington 




29 


Kentucky 


District of Columbia. 
New Mexico 


717 


31 




13 


Tennessee 


565 


9 


Rhode Island 








Rhode Island 








460 
448 
495 


17 


Nebraska 




12 


Maine 

West Virginia 


Nebraska 


20 


Maine 


405 


6 


West Virginia 












Alabama 


Georgia 


338 




North Carolina 

New Hampshire 






19 


New Hampshire 

North Carolina 


229 


13 








Vermont 

Mississippi 


Florida 


176 


g 


Utah 




10 








11 


New Mexico 


Mississippi 


152 




North Dakota 

Florida 






17 


South Carolina 

North Dakota 

Idaho 






South Dakota 

Idaho 


117 
111 


6 


South Carolina 

Wyoming 


South Dakota 

Wyoming 


66 


3 


Delaware . . 




52 


2 



Indian Territory 

Nevada 


Indian Territory 

Nevada 


37 


1 


Oklahoma. 


0) 




(') 









Without consulting the tabular presentation of indi- 
vidual institutions, it is apparent not only that many 
hospitals are very limited in facilities, but also that the 
number of hospitals in a state gives little indication of 
the extent of institutional operations. For example. 



34 



benevolp:nt institutions. 



Iowa has four times as many hospitals as Louisiana, 
or 41 against the latter's 10, yet, both as to number of 
admissions in a year and the number of patients to be 
found at any given time, the hospital work of Louisiana 
is on a larger scale. 

The differences in the number of admissions to hospi- 
tals per 100,000 of population may point to a \ariety of 
unknown factors which prevent exact comparisons. In 
the general view, however, a wide discrepancy in ratios 
of admissions must be taken to indicate the extent and 
sufEcienc}^ of hospital facilities, and not that climatic 
conditions, the distribution of population, the presence 
of epidemics, etc. , cause an unusual amount of sickness 
in some states as compared with others. In other words, 
the ratios of admissions to population furnish the best 
available means of estimating what the number of hos- 
pitals found in a state mean to it. The fact that of two 
states very similar as to general conditions one shows a 
ratio of admissions twice as large as the other may be 
taken in most cases to mean that in the one hospital 
facilities are proportionately more ample. What has 
been said of admissions is also true of the number 
found in hospitals at any time. No comparisons be- 
tween states are attempted; but in the following table 
the states are ranked according to number of persons 
admitted to hospitals in 1904, and also according to 
number of persons remaining December 31, 1904, in 
each 100,000 of population: 

States and territories ranked according to number of persons admitted to 
hospitals during 190-iper 100,000 of population, and also according 
to number of patients on December 31, 1904, per 100,000 of popu- 
lation. 



STATE OK TERRITORY. 



United States. 

District of Columbia 

New York 

California 

Massachusetts 

Washington 

Colorado 

Rhode Island 

Maryland 

New Jersey 

Montana 

Pennsylvania 

Connecticut 

Arizona 

Illinois 

Missouri 

Louisiana 

Oregon 

Ohio 

Minnesota 

Utah 

New Mexico 

Wyoming 

New Hampshire 

Wisconsin 

Maine 

Michigan 

Vermont 

Idaho 

Virginia 

Texas 

Kansas 

Nebraska 



Number 
admitted 

during 

1904 per 
100,000 of 

popula- 
tion. 



2. 420. 
2,245.7 

2. 222. 1 
1, 999. 9 
1, 878. 5 



1,660.9 
1,637.4 
1,.524.3 
1, 337. 2 



945.9 
890.3 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States. 

New Mexico 

District of Columbia 

New York 

Colorado -,-,>- 

California ^..- 

Washington ...: 

Pennsylvania ...... 

Montana 

Massachusetts 

Maryland 

Ohio 

Arizona 

New Jersey 

Illinois 

Rhode Island 

Missouri 

Oregon 

Connecticut 

Minnesota 

Louisiana 

Wyoming , 

Maine 

Idaho 

Utah 

Wisconsin 

New Hampshire 

Michigan 

Vermont 

Nebraska 

Kentucky 

Kansas 

Iowa 



Number 

of pa- 
tients on 
Dec. 31, 
1904, per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



53.5 
49.8 
40.1 



States and territories ranked according to number of persons admitted to 
hospitals during 1904 per 100,000 of population, and also according 
to number of patients on December 31, 1904, per 100,000 of jMpu- 
lation — Continued. 



STATE OR TEKKITORY, 



West Virginia . 

Iowa 

North Dakota . 

Delaware 

Tennessee 

Kentucky 

Indiana 

South Dakota.. 



Alabama 

Arkansas 

North Carolina. . 
Indian Territory 

Mississippi 

South Carolina . . 

Nevada 

Oklahoma 



Number 
admitted 
during 
1904 per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



STATE OK TERRITORY 



West Virginia . . 
North Dakota . . 

Indiana 

Florida 

Virginia 

Delaware 

Texas 

South Dakota . . . 

Tennessee 

Arkansas 

Georgia 

North Carolina . 
Alabama 



Number 

of pa- 
tients on 
Dec. 31, 
1904, per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



South Carolina . . 
Indian Territory 

Nevada 

Oklahoma 



Number on medical staff. — All but 15 hospitals made 
complete returns in regard to the number on resident 
medical staff'. There were 2,863 resident physicians, 
divided among 1,478 hospitals. Less satisfactory 
answers were given to the inquiry about the visiting- 
medical staff'. In the case of many small institutions 
practically ever}^ reputable physician of the locality is 
considered as belonging to the visiting staff. The total 
of 15,914 given for the United States is therefore a num- 
ber without exact significance, but serves to indicate 
the armj^ of physicians more or less regularly engaged 
in looking after patients in hospitals of the benevolent 
order. 

Numher of nurses and training schools for nurses.—- 
In all 21,844 nurses were found employed in the care of 
patients at 1,484 hospitals, there being 9 which failed 
to report this item. Doubtless in some instances the 
term "nurse" merely stands for a more or less trained 
attendant. What proportion the whole number of 
nurses regularly educated for their duties bears to the 
whole number employed it is impossible to say; but it is 
significant that more than one-half of the hospitals, or 
867, report that they conduct training schools for nurses. 
In addition to these training schools there are some 
under the supervision of various religious sisterhoods. 

Cost of maintenance. — Of the considerable number of 
hospitals which neglected to state the cost of mainte- 
nance in 1903, or for peculiar reasons found themselves 
unable to do so, nearly all are comparatively small 
institutions. The total given for the whole country, 
$28,200,869, is therefore approximately correct. 

As shown in Table xi, 22.6 per cent of the gross 
cost of maintenance was expended for the hospitals 
classed as public institutions. The cost of the private 
and ecclesiastical reached a total of $21,594,78^. De- 
ducting for both these classes the amounts of income 



HOSPITALS. 



35 



from pa/ patients and the annual grants from public 
funds, the sum which was raised through some other 
form of benevolence than appropriations from taxes 
was 17,580,504. Many hospitals receive substantial aid 
through donations in kind, which diminish the need of 
cash outlay. The value of these gifts can not be 
estimated. 

In all cases the returns of cost are exclusive of im- 
provements. 

How unequal 1}^ the burden of supporting hospitals is 
distributed among the states is apparent from the next 
table, showing the cost of maintenance for each state 
and territory, in the order of the amounts expended 
during 1903: 

States and territories ranked according to cost of maintenance of 
hospitals: 1903. 



United States 

New York 

Pennsylvania 

Massachusetts 

Illinois 

California 

Ohio 

Missouri 

New Jersey 

Maryland 

Minnesota 

Michigan..- 

Connecticut 

Colorado 

Wisconsin 

Texas 

Iowa 

Montana 

Washington 

Dist. of Columbia . 

New Mexico 

Louisiana 

Indiana 

Kentucky 



Cost of 




mainte- 
nance, 1903. 


Rank. 


828,200,869 


24 




25 
26 
27 
28 
29 
30 
31 
32 
33 
34 
35 
36 


6,732,983 


3, 637, 671 
2, 702, 646 


2,165,847 


1, 450, 123 


1,423,245 


919, 865 


801, 529 


719, 921 


633,076 






464,037 


38 
39 
40 
41 
42 
43 
44 
45 
46 
47 
48 
49 


459, 970 


392,339 


352, 416 
343, 956 
300,359 


299,460 


291,222 


268, 661 


260, 345 


255.821 


253, 487 



Ehode Island .. 

Maine 

Kansas 

Nebraska 

Virginia 

Georgia 

Tennessee 

West Virginia . . , 
New Hampshire. 
North Carolina . , 

Arizona 

Alabama 

Utah 

Oregon 

Florida 

Vermont 

South Carolina . , 

South Dakota 

Arkansas 

North Dakota . . . 

Idaho 

Mississippi 

Delaware 

Wyoming , 

Indian Territory 
Oklahoma 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



$234, 044 
231, 640 
184, 387 
175, 078 
174, 921 
152, 017 
150, 073 
130, 761 
116, 207 
94, 911 
90, 436 
76, 706 
76, 626 



54, ,349 
54,313 
52,670 
48, 154 
33, 907 
31, 872 
28, 484 
27, 049 
14, 547 
4,105 



The first 6 states contain about 35 per cent of the 
total population of the country, yet contribute about 
two-thirds of the cost of maintaining hospitals, or over 
eighteen million dollars, while the group of 31 states 
(including the District of Columbia) beginning with 
Connecticut and ending with New Hampshire, which 
contains almost exactl}^ the same percentage of inhabit- 
ants as the first 6, spends for this purpose less than 
six millions, or a little more than a fifth of the entire 
cost for. the United States. The 5 states, Missouri, 
New Jersey, Maryland, Minnesota, and Michigan, 
although containing but 13.6 per cent of the population, 
expend 13,698,221 for the support of hospitals, while 
the 17 states beginning with North Carolina and ending 
with Oklahoma have 15.5 per cent of the total popula- 
tion and gave but 1898,419 for the support of hospitals. 

These financial comparisons indicate the conditions 
necessitating extensive hospital facilities rather than 
the advance in benevolent enterprises, though the latter 
is more generally a concomitant of settled and pros- 
perous community life. 



Subsidies from public funds. — The total amount 
received by hospitals from this source was $2,276,336, 
which equals 18.1 per cent of the cost of maintenance 
in 1903. The hospitals in the following states and 
territories were not aided by payments from taxes: 
California, Idaho, Indian Territory, Nevada, North 
Dakota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Utah. Elsewhere 
the subsidies run from $340 in Wyoming to $725,554 
in Pennsylvania, and cover percentages of cost vaiying 
from 0.5 per cent in Minnesota to 24.5 per cent in 
North Carolina and 33.4 per cent in the District of 
Columbia. Other states having institutions receiving 
notable amounts are Georgia, Connecticut, Pennsyl- 
vania, Alabama, Maryland, Rhode Island, Maine, New 
Jersey, Arizona, and New York. Institutions in 29 
states are helped through subsidies to the extent of less 
than 8 per cent of the cost of maintenance, as maj^ be 
gathered from the .subjoined table, giving the amounts 
granted by each state or territory, together with the 
percentages the}^ form of expenditures: 

Annual subsidies to hospitals from public funds and per cent of cost of 
maintenance covered by such subsidies, for states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas , 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

.Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa - 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine : 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana '. 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

.Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 
1903. 



126, 002 
73, 148 
12, 220 
2,939 



10, 086 
712, 129 
23, 2.33 



500 

9,034 

5, 294 
9,575 
9,752 
6,000 
2,249 



Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



340 



Income fro7n pay patients. — The total sum received 
by hospitals in payment for care of patients was 
$12,181,484, which forms 43.2 per cent of the cost of 



36 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



maintenance. In 24 states, including some doing tiie 
largest hospital work, as New York, Pennsylvania, 
Massachusetts, Ohio, etc., such income covers less than 
50 per cent of the cost of maintenance; in 19 states it 
equals from 50 to 80 per cent of the cost of mainte- 
nance; in Indian Territory, Nebraska, North Dakota, 
and Oklahoma it was, respectively, 94.1, 89.3, 96.5, and 
82.9 per cent of the cost; and in Utah and Oregon the 
income actuallj^ exceeded the cost, the percentages 
being 116.2 and 109.7, all of which is exhilDited in the 
following table: 

Income from pay patients of hospitals and per cent of cost of mainte- 
nance covered by such income, for states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 



Maryland 

Massachusetts . . . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire. 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina.. 
North Dakota . . . 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . . 
Rhode Island . . . 
South Carolina . . 
South Dakota . . . 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia . . . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



Income 

from pay 

patients, 

1903. 



$32, 757 
32, 360 
25, 982 
811, 809 
221, 080 
204, 864 
7, 524 
101, 648 
18, 976 
58, 577 
21,979 
, 365, 205 
13, 590 
173,797 
253, 598 
100, 182 
85,424 
67, 958 
126, 771 
311, 706 
973,358 
457, 854 
472,922 
6,052 
459, 893 
140, 924 
156, 400 



69, 297 

258, 396 

70, 159 

,951,022 



3,403 

79, 015 

, 085, 366 



67, 565 
304, 278 
21, 419 



Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



27.4 
38.5 
64.8 
63.0 
94.1 
67.9 
73.7 
54.3 
33.7 



73.3 

74.7 
19.0 



29! 

40.5 



79.9 
52.1 
60.4 
116.2 



75.7 
51.7 
77.6 
79.2 



There is an apparent contradiction in describing hos- 
pitals as benevolent institutions when the amount of 
monej' they receive from pay patients is equal to or in 
excess of the cost of maintenance; but, in general, it 
should be remembered that to a very large extent the 
moneys termed income do not represent the personal con- 
tributions of the patients or their relatives and friends, 
but the amounts collected from the public authorities 



legally responsible for their support. Furthermore, 
the cost of maintenance as given does not include 
improvements or general equipment. A hospital ma}- 
receive income, on account of patients, equal to or larger 
than the bare cost of running it, yet deserve the appel- 
lation "benevolent," because it owes its existence to 
generous endo\/ment, and because the services of phy- 
sicians and attendants are not reckoned among the items 
of cost. 

DISPENSARIES. 

Table xv gives, b}^ states and territories, a summary 
of the details presented for this class of institutions in 
Table 2, with the number designated as public, private, 
and ecclesiastical, and the ratio of cases treated in 1904 
per 100,000 of mean population. 

Although the dispensaries differ from other institu- 
tions in the respect that the persons frequenting them 
are occasional visitors rather than inmates, the,y are 
too conspicuous a part of the medical charity to be 
ignored. If certain out-patient departments of hospitals 
had been counted as separate institutions, which would 
have been misleading, the total number of dispensaries 
would have been augmented. Dispensaries that are 
mere feeders to hospitals run for profit were excluded. 

For 27 states no dispensaries were reported. About 
two-thirds of the entire number (156) are found in 
California, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New 
York, and Pennsylvania. In other words, dispensa- 
ries as separate institutions are peculiar to large urban 
centers. Only 11 were maintained at public cost, and 
17 were supported by churches, the remainder (128) 
being under private control. 

From 33 dispensaries no statements were obtainable 
in regard to the number of cases treated during 1904. 
The total given, 1,611,651, is therefore lower than the 
actual number, but gives a hint of the magnitude of 
the practically free medical service obtainable through 
the dispensaries. On the basis of the above total the 
number of cases treated in them to 100,000 of popu- 
lation was, for the entire country, 1,982.3. Nowhere 
has the system of medical dispensaries reached such a 
development as in the state of New York, or more par- 
ticularl}^ the city of New York. There the ratio of 
cases treated to 100,000 inhabitants reached the remark- 
able figure of 10,848.5, a ratio nearly twice as large as 
that for any other state. 

The medical staff of 151 dispensaries (5 not reporting 
this item) numbered 2,427. 

It cost in 1903 to maintain 148 dispensaries (8 being 
omitted), $519,620. 

From public funds $23,501 were contributed toward 
the support of this class of institutions by 6 of the 23 
states reporting dispensaries. 



PEEMANENT HOMES. 

Table XV.— DISPENSARIES, BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



37 





NUMBEE OF INSTITUTIONS. 


Number 

of cases 

treated in 

1904. 


Number 
on med- 
ical staff. 


Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 
1903. 


Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 


Number 


STATE OB TEREITOBY. 


Total. 


Public. 


Private. 


Ecclesi- 
astical. 


treated in 

1904 per 

100,000 of 

population. 




156 


11 


128 


17 


1,611,651 


2,427 


$23,501 


$519,620 


1,982.3 














































ArlcHTlSBS 






















10 


1 





9 
2 

2 





1 


60,963 
15, 139 

18,461 


219 
13 

39 


1,800 


1,500 


38, 103 
1,278 

4,838 


3,819.8 




2, 560. 1 




1,894.1 








3 





2 


i 


6,371 


18 


1,400 


1,822 


2, 134. 7 




























■ 


















Illinois 


14 





12 


2 


91,210 


324 





35, 708 


1,744.7 








1 






6 




39,i92 
1,500 


149 

18 


6 




16,34.5 
100 


1,479.6 














































































10 
13 


2 

1 



1 


11 

6 

2 




1 





73,021 

182, 182 
8,950 
12, 687 


50 

279 
60 
65 


7,175 






14,391 

51 , 415 
19,946 
5,243 


5, 999. 5 










Mississippi 






' 


3 


5 





87, .513 


120 





67. 377 




























Nevada . 










































4 


' 


3 





29,264 


47 


2,500 


10,505 




New Mexico 






40 
1 






33 

1 


7 



844, 634 
(1) 


688 
0) 


9,126 



209, 181 
2 75 














7 





^ 


1 


23,771 


86 





6,132 




Oklahoma 






1 

15 
3 
2 









12 

2 


1 

3 




50 
102,603 
1,107 
0) 


141 
12 








50 

36,729 

670 

1,193 








Rhode Island 


239 4 




(') 






1 

1 






1 
1 






5,000 
1,000 


5 
34 






700 
238 








Utah 
























Virginia 


2 


1 


1 





7,033 


48 





3,581 








West Virginia 




















Wisconsin 




















Wyoming 






























■ 











1 Not reported. 



PERMANENT HOMES. 



- Open October to May. 



Table xvi gives, by states and territories, a summary 
of the details presented for this class of institutions in 



Table 3, with the number designated as public, private, 
and ecclesiastical, and the ratios of inmates on Decem- 
ber 31, 1904, and of admissions during the year, per 
100,000 of population. 



38 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table XVI. -PERMANENT HOMES, 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



NUMBER OP INSTITUTIONS. 



For 
adults 
alone. 



For 

adults 

and 

children. 



NUMBER OF INMATES ON JAN. 1, 1904. 



Women. Children, 



NUMBER ADMITTED DURING 1904. 



Women. Children, 



United States. 



Alabama .. 
Arjzona ... 
Arkansas . . 
California . 
Colorado .. 



Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia . 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territor\ 

Indiana . . ; 

Iowa 



Kansas . . . 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 



Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



Montana . 
Nebraska. 
Nevada. .. 
New : 
New Jersey , 



New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina . 
North Dakota . . 
Ohio 



1,136 

119 

1,389 



9 
3,721 
1,334 



1,011 



641 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island... 
South Carolina . 

South Dakota... 



U, 357 
161 

9,167 



iexas 

Utah 

Vermont . 



■ 96 

1,052 

543 



1,025 
255 

■"■"si' 



Virginia 

Washin§:ton . . . 
West Virginia . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



PERMANENT HOMES. 



39 



BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



v-UMBER REMAI^ 



118 

""137' 
5,564 



5, 625 




ENTRANCE 



Number of 
institutions 
having a 
fixed rate. 



Number of 
paid em- 
ployees. 



Annual sub- 
sidies from 
public funds, 
1903. 



Income from 
pay inmates, 



Cost of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



Admitted 
during 1904. 



1,721 

102 
710 



2, 251 



4,723 

600 

1,056 
2,940 
2, 72? 

23, 750 

168 
2,286 



8,797 
51, 471 



12, 944 



10, 294 



240, 988 

14, 638 

333, 557 

6,709 



17, 311 
681, 719 
1,873 
361, 465 
189, 263 

464, 666 
80, 304 
73, 7.57 

376, 732 
76, 217 

417, 714 
197, 760 
118,443 

166, 315 

15,648 



27.7 
342.4 
15.7 



1.3.0 


18 


14 4 


19 


46.3 


20 


18.8 


21 


37 9 


m 


35. 8 




15,1 


24 


3.0 


25 


21.6 


26 



1,240 
1, 325 

""353' 

4,327 

453 

17 

3,863 

48 



4,646 

6 
867 



264, 954 

468 



12, 431 



2,356 
252 

"i'ies' 

3,416 
600 
700 



25, 296 

741, 494 

61, 222 

9,406 



4,410 

457, 381 

7, 500 



144.4 
8.0 
11.1 



40 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Under the title "permanent homes" is compre- 
hended a wide variety of benevolent undertakings. 
There are homes for aged dependents without means 
and for aged persons who can pay a liberal entrance 
fee, for persons afflicted with various incurable diseases 
or otherwise disabled^ etc. Some of the homes make 
few distinctions as to the nature of dependence; others 
are devoted to a special class. To some only adults are 
admitted; others receive both adults and children, and 
are, in fact, permanent homes for adults, with orphan- 
age annexes. A detailed classification of these institu- 
tions was not attempted, in view of the incompleteness 
of the data at hand for this purpose. 

Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Utah 
are as yet without any permanent homes for depend- 
ents. The 753 whose existence could be traced are 
pretty evenly distributed among the states, allowing 
for the necessity of a proportionatel}^ large number in 
the older communities. In proportion to population 
Massachusetts leads in institutions of this character. 
Sixt}^ of the permanent homes are reported as main- 
tained by public authorities. Of those under private 
management (constituting a large majority) some are 
endowed establishments and a few owe their origin, as 
well as continued existence, to the muniBcence of 
individuals. 

The permanent homes under church supervision are 
outnumbered by those termed private almost two to 
one, 13 states being without any. The states in which 
the ecclesiastical institutions of this kind form the 
majority are Connecticut, Illinois, Minnesota, South 
Carolina, Washington, and "Wisconsin and the District 
of Columbia. 

Nuinher of inmates. — More than three times as 
many persons were inmates of permanent homes at the 
beginning and at the end of 1904 as there were persons 
admitted during that year. The actual gain in popu- 
lation for the twelve months was 1,815, which seems 
small considering that 29,353 were admitted. More- 
over, a large part of the gain is owing to the admission of 
children, and ma}^ also be accounted for parti}' by the 
fact that the population is more shifting in some institu- 
tions classified as permanent homes than the name would 
seem to implj^ (it will be observed that the ratio of 
admissions to inmates is particularly high in some 
states), and partly b}' the naturally high death rate 
in this group of institutions. It is evident that the 
number of institutions does not always indicate cor- 
rectly the extent of their benevolent work. Thus 
Massachusetts has more than ten times as manj' perma- 
nent homes as Kansas, more than three times as many 



as Virginia, more than five times as many as Wiscon- 
sin, etc.; yet in these three states the numbers both 
of inmates and of admissions are much larger, owing 
chiefl}' to the large public institutions maintained in 
them, as is shown elsewhere in this report. 

JSmnber of inmates and admissions per 100^000 of 
population. — The populous Federal and state homes are 
largely responsible for the striking variations in the 
ratios of inmates on the given date to 100,000 of popu- 
lation. If these were excluded, a much larger share of 
benevolent work in caring for various groups of de- 
pendents would be shown than now appears credited to 
some states that are foremost in this charity. 

The following table shows the rank of the states with 
reference to the number of inmates and the number of 
admissions per 100,000 of population: 

States and territories ranked according to number of persons admitted 
to permanent homes in 1904 per 100,000 of population, and also ac- 
cording to number of inmates on December 31, 1904, per 100,000 of 
population. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States. 

District of Columbia 

New Hampshire 

California 

Kansas 

Connecticut 

New York 

Washington 

Pennsylvania 

Tennessee 

Ohio 

Illinois 

Virginia 

Maine 

Wisconsin 

Vermont 

Indiana 

Rhode Island 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

New Jersey 

Idaho 

Delaware 

Colorado 

Nebraska 

South Dakota 

Montana 

Oregon 

Missouri 

Iowa 

Maryland 

Wyoming 

Texas __. 

Florida 

Minnesota 

Louisiana 

Kentucky 

Arkansas 

North Dakota 

South Carolina 

Georgia 

Alabama 

Indian Territory . . . 

Mississippi 

North Carolina 

West Virginia 



Number 
admitted 
during 
1904 per 
100,000 
of popu- 
lation. 



342.4 
123.5 
100.0 
85.2 
68.7 
54.3 
52.2 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States. 

District of Columbia 

Maine 

California 

Kansas 

Virginia 

Ohio 

Wisconsin 

New York 

Indiana 

Illinois 

Connecticut 

Rhode Island 

Vermont 

New Jersey 

New Hampshire 

Massachusetts 

Washington 

Maryland •. 

Pennsylvania 

Delaware 

Michigan 

Nebraska 

Colorado 

Idaho 

Tennessee 

Iowa 

Louisiana 

Missouri 

South Dakota 

Wyoming 

Oregon 

Kentucky 

Texas 

Minnesota 

Montana 

Georgia 

North Dakota 

Florida 

Arkansas 

South Carolina 

North Carolina 

Alabama 

Indian Territory . . . 

Mississippi 

West Virginia 



of in- 
mates 
on Dec. 
31, 1904, 

per 
100,000 
of popu- 
lation. 



222.5 
208.3 
172.4 
144.4 



110.8 
10L2 
92.0 
89.3 
86.3 
76.5 



73. 



52.1 
49.5 
45.2 
39.8 



PERMANENT HOMES. 



41 



Sex of inmates. — In all states except Delaware, Flor- 
ida, Louisiana, Marj'^land, Massachusetts, New Hamp- 
shire, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina there is a 
marked predominance of males among the persons who 
were inmates of permanent homes on the two dates 
given. There were also about three times as many 
males as females admitted to these institutions during 
1904, the relation of the sexes in respect to number 
remaining the same, however, in the states mentioned, 
excepting Massachusetts; and in Missouri also the 
females were in the majority of those admitted. West 
Virginia supports homes for women only. Again, the 
ample provisions made for the veterans furnishes a far- 
reaching explanation which, so far as most states are 
concerned, suffices to explain the predominance of tnales 
among persons admitted. Nevertheless it seems prob- 
able that outside this class there are more males than 
females who stand in need of the kind of care obtainable 
in the various homes. 

Cost of maintenance. — It cost $9,916,180 to maintain 
752 permanent homes; the returns from one institution 
not being available. The sum expended in each state 
is given in the statement below, in the order of the 
amount: 

States and territories ranked according to cost of maintenance of public 
homes: 1903. 



New York 

Ohio 

Pennsylvania 

Illinois 

California 

Kansas 

Wisconsin 

Virginia 

Massachusetts 

Maine 

Indiana 

Dist. of Columbia 

New Jersey , 

Connecticut , 

Michigan 

Iowa 

Missouri. 

Texas 

Minnesota 

Nebraska 

Colorado 

Kentucky 



«1, 792, 389 
1, 044, 545 
741, 494 
681, 719 
625,935 
464, 666 



333, 557 
262, 213 
240, 988 
197, 760 
189, 263 
166, 315 
135, 966 
118, 443 
90, 918 
80,968 
80, 304 



Maryland 

Louisiana 

Rhode Island . . . 
New Hampshire. 

Washington 

Vermont 

South Dakota, . . , 

Arkansas 

Tennessee 

Oregon 

Georgia 

Idaho 

North Carolina.. 

Montana 

Delaware 

South Carolina . . 
North Dakota . . . 

Wyoming 

Florida 

West Virginia . . . 
Indian Territory 
Alabama 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



$76, 217 
73, 757 
61, 222 

il, 896 
44,511 
39, 000 
32, 055 
29, 400 
25, 296 
18, 938 
17, 311 
16,550 
16,648 

9^406 
8,978 
7,500 
6,709 
4,410 



S'uhsidies from p^iblic funds. — Nineteen of the 44 
states and territories supporting permanent homes do 
not enjoy any part of the $188,077 given to permanent 
homes from pubHc funds. The entire amount is but 
1.9 per cent of the cost of maintenance. Of course, 
the sums voted to institutions of the public order are 
not considered as subsidies of the kind under discussion. 

The extent of the aid from public sources in the 
different states and the percentage it forms of the cost 
of maintenance are presented below: 

Annual subsidies to permanent homes from public funds and per cent 
of cost of maintenance covered by such subsidies, for specified stales 
and territories: 1903. 



TERRITORY. 



California 

Colorado 

District of Columbia . 

Georgia , 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

New Hampshire , 

New Jersey 

New York 

North Carolina 

Ohio 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Vermont 

Washington 

Wisconsin 



Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 



88, 448 
3,000 

11, 900 
2,000 
2,251 
4,723 
600 
1,056 



23, 750 
168 



3,358 

2,000 

47, 930 

618 



Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 



1 Less than one-tenth of 1 per cent. 

Income from pay inmates. — The $820,096 collected 
from pay inmates during the year equals 8.3 per cent 
of the total cost of maintenance. For the individual 
states the amounts vary from $252 in Texas to $264,954 
in New York. The permanent homes in these 9 states 
and territories report no income: Alabama, Georgia, 
Idaho, Indian Territory, Mississippi, North Dakota, 
South Carolina, South Dakota, and Wyoming. 



42 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



The sums collected in the remaining- 36 states and 
territories, together with the percentage they constitute 
of cost of maintenance, are as follows: 

Income from pay patients of permanent homes and per cent of cost of 
maintenance covered by such income, for specified states and terri- 
tories: 1903. 



STATE OE TERRITORY. 



Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia 

Florida , 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New York 

North Carolina 

Ohio 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode" Island 

Tennessee 

Texas — 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



S662 

5,220 

519 

5,072 



,927 



61,471 

28, 690 

12, 944 

10, 294 

1,958 

3,330 

9,569 

41, 233 

264, 954 

468 

12,431 

4,396 

103, 920 

3,979 

2,356 

252 

2,163 

3,416 

600 

700 

17,671 



Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



19.0 
15.7 
14.8 
2.8 
1.2 
17.4 
14.0 
6.5 



Entrance fees. — In all, 364 of the 753 permanent homes 
report that they do not exact an entrance fee, though 
presumably they gladly receive pay from inmates. Two 
hundred and sixty-two institutions have fixed entrance 
fees, varying from $24 to 11,560, and showing an aver- 
age of $258. These are practically all homes for aged 
persons. To the same category belong 65 institutions 
having entrance fees with a minimum and maximum 
rate; $25 to $50 being the lowest, and $2,000 to $2,500 
being the highest. Ten homes report difi'erent rates 
for men and women and for couples; one home asks 
$250 " andpropert}^," etc. Finally, 51 institutions have 
no fixed entrance fee. The amount charged depends 
upon the circumstances of the applicant. If the 65 
institutions having variable rates are charged with the 
minimum amount in each case, the average for the 327 
(262 + 65) institutions would be about $270. 

How man}' institutions are rendered practically self- 
supporting through entrance fees is not known. There 
are undoubtedly some homes for the aged whose main 
assets from the first ai-e the anticipated entrance fees, 
while in many more instances the homes appear to look 
to this income to meet only a part of the running ex- 
penses. Other homes are fairly well endowed. 

The number of permanent homes reporting on the 
item of entrance fee, classified according to amount of 
fee, is shown in the following table: 



Entrance fees. 



ENTRANCE FEB. 


Number 
of insti- 
tutions. 


ENTRANCE FEE. 


Number 
of insti- 
tutions. 


Total reporting 


753 


$200 to $'50 


5 








364 








$200to $100 










262 






Fixed rates 




1 




$250 to $500 


S24 


- 1 
2 

1 

1 
51 

2 
19 
71 

1 
17 

1 
57 

21 
9 
1 

65 


$300 to $450 


\ 








$50 


$300 to $600 




$65 


$300 to $3 000 


I 








8100 


$500 to $1 000 


I 














$200 


$1 000 to $2 000 


2 














$275 


$2 000 to $2 500 


1 












$400 






$500 




$1 000 










1 




Aduits{||0::;::::;;::::;:;: 






1 
} ' 

1 : 

} ^ 






$25 to $50 


1 
1 
1 

1 

1 

3 

1 
3 
1 


Women $150 






$25 to $500 


Females $100 










$100 to $350 


Single $2.50 






$150 to $200 




$150 to $''50 


1 












$150 to $500 


1 









TEMPORARY HOMES. 

Table xtii gives, by states and territories, a sum- 
maiy of the details presented for this class of institu- 
tions in Table 4, with the number designated as public, 
private, and ecclesiastical, and the ratios of inmates 
on December 31, 1904, and of admissions during 1904 
per 100,000 of population. 

The 449 temporary homes, of which one or more are 
found in each state and territory except Idaho, Indian 
Territory, Nevada, New Mexico, South Dakota, and 
Wyoming, are exceedingly diverse in character. Some 
are mere overnight shelters f or waj^farers, intended for 
the reception of men only or women with or without 
children. Others are in the nature of general rescue 
homes for all classes of unfoi'tunates. Still others have 
as their peculiar mission the reclamation of wayward 
girls and fallen women. Some are on the border line 
between rescue homes and lodging" houses under benevo- 
lent au,spices, but to some extent self-sustaining, having 
at least the distinct purpose of providing a safe haven 
for homeless persons of scant or no means and for 
penniless strangers. A large number of establishments 
were originallj^ listed which, upon further examination, 
proved to be nothing more than boarding houses for 
self-supporting wage-earners and were, therefore, omit- 
ted. Some of them unquestionably owe their inception 
to benevolent impulse, but others are open to the 
suspicion of being run for profit under the guise of 
charit3\ 



44 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table XVII.— TEMPORARY HOMES, 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States. 



Alabama . . 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas . . 
California . 
Colorado .. 



District of Columbia. 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory. 

Indiana 

Iowa 



NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS. 



For 
adults 
alone. 



For 

adults 

and 

children. 



NUMBER or INMATES ON JAN. 1, 1904. 



NUMBER ADMITTED DURING 1904. 



21, 761 



18,023 



Kansas 

Kentucky . 
Louisiana . 

Maine 

Maryland . 



Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire. 
New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina . . 
North Dakota . . . 
Ohio 



2,158 

756 

468 

7 



173 

2,446 

515 

618 

132, 351 



114, 934 

5, 437 

10, 950 

19 

35 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island... 
South Carolina . 

South Dakota... 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 



Virginia 

Washington , 
West Virginii 
Wisconsin . . . 
Wyoming ... 



2,907 
55 
13 

1,353 

11 

57 

1,342 

47 

25 

'"186 

230 

3 

11 



31,176 

57, 885 

429 

91 






2,198 



1 Not reported. 



TEMPORARY HOMES. 



45 



BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



NUMBER EEMAINING 



Number of 

institutions 

having a 

fixed rate. 



1.25 



1.25 



Income from 



public funds, 



1,844 
3,840 
6,300 
3,500 
4,500 

902 1 



3,340 



2,000 

19,700 

1,000 

400 




1,040 



20 
2,400 
21, 220 
62, 851 

8,012 



12,281 



Cost of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



3,000 
1,100 
5,708 
90, 971 
125, 761 

34,657 
1,000 
46, 780 
515 
10, 133 



5,501 
56,967 
27, 502 
10, 443 
46,287 

290,275 
70, 692 
46, 326 
849 
27, 669 



149, 742 

1,792 
5,217 
277, 062 
7,116 
2,463 



15, 759 

25, 046 

600 

1,200 

7,420 
7,209 
13, 462 



77.8 
28.6 
17.0 
0.2 
37.1 



40.4 
34.5 
16.7 



35.1 
11.5 
21.3 



Admitted 
during 1904. 



134.9 

2. 264. 3 
7.8 

6. 930. 4 

13.2 



321.6 

11.6 
108.0 
34.6 
87.3 
872. 5 



46 



bp:nevolent institutions. 



On account of the insufficient data at hand in many 
instances a classification in detail of the tempoi-ary homes 
was not attempted. 

The need of institutions of the character described 
being largest in the densel}^ populated centers, it fol- 
lows as a matter of course that the states with the lar- 
gest urban communities should have a majority of them. 
In fact, 269 of the total number, or nearly two-thirds, 
are found in the following states: California, Illinois, 
Massachusetts, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, 
and Pennsylvania. 

Qnl}!- 9 temporary homes are designated as public and 
146 as being under church management. Most of them 
are undertakings of private associations or corporations. 
Adults alone are received by 175 homes and both adults 
and children by 259. 

Numher of inmates. — How truly the institutions 
under consideration deserve to be called temporary 
homes is evident from the extraordinary movement of 
their population. In other words, for every inmate 
found on January 1, 1904, there were 33 admitted dur- 
ing the year. With a single exception — namelv, Dela- 
ware — the admissions exceed the number on hand on 
the dates given. The rate of admission is largest in 
New Jersey in proportion both to the population of the 
state and to the number of homes. In most states with 
a large number of homes the preponderance of admis- 
sions over number of inmates present on the first and 
last days of 1904 is striking. California, with her 15 
temporary homes, forms a notable exception, as the 
total number of persons admitted is not much in excess 
of the number of inmates at the beginning and at the 
end of the year. 

The total admissions are shown below for the states, 
including the District of Columbia, having more than 
500 admissions to temporary homes in 1904. Of the 
remaining states 19 had less than 500 admissions; from 
1 no I'eport is at hand; and 6, so far as could be ascer- 
tained, are without any temporary homes. It is thus 
evident that very manj^ institutions are of limited capac- 
ity. The number of inmates on hand on a given date 
is not a safe criterion, because so manj^ institutions ofi'er 
shelter practically only overnight. 

Specified states ranked according to numher of persons admitted to tem- 
porary homes during 1904- 



Rank. 


Admitted 
STATE. 1 during 
1904. 


Rank. 


STATE. 


Admitted 
during 
1904. 


1 


New York 


245, 094 
206,511 
132,351 
68,293 
57, 885 
31 176 


13 
14 
15 
16 
17 
18 
19 
20 
21 
22 
23 
24 


Michigan 


5 901 










Massachusetts 


Indiana 


3,643 








5 
6 


Pennsylvania 






California 


944 


Illilois. 


26,990 


New Hampshire 


805 


p 


District of Columbia. 20,684 
Minnesota 11,389 


Nebraska 


791 








11 








7,598 




515 











Ratios of inmates and admissions to population. — A 
further view of the extent and kind of activities exer- 
cised by the temporary homes is afforded in the next 
table, in which the states are ranked in descending order 
of such ratios. The number of admissions to 100,000 
inhabitants fluctuates from 4.1 in North Carolina to 
10,011.1 in New Jersey. In 24 states the number is less 
than 100; in but 6, exclusive of the District of Colum- 
bia, does it exceed 1,000. The ratio of inmates on 
December 31, 1904, to population shows much less 
violent fluctuations when one excepts the District of 
Columbia. 

Slates and territories ranked according to numher of persons admitf/ d 
to temporary homes during 1904 per 100,000 of population, and also 
according to numher of inmates on December 31, 1904, per 100,000 of 
population. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States.. 

New Jersey 

District of Columbia 

Oregon 

Massachusetts 

New York 

Connecticut 

Ohio 

Maryland 

Pennsylvania 

Minnesota 

Illinois 

Iowa 

Michigan 

New Hampshire 

Missouri 

Indiana 

Colorado 

Wisconsin 

Kentucky 

Rhode Island 

Maine 

Nebraska 

California 

Washington 

Louisiana 

Texas 

North Dakota 

Montana 

Tennessee 

Georgia 

Arizona 

West Virginia 

Virginia 

Kansas 

Arkansas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Delaware 

Oklahoma 

South Carolina 

Alabama 

Mississippi 

North Carolina 



Number 
admitted 
during 
1904 per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



146.3 
137.5 
134.9 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



United States.. 

District of Columbia 

New York 

Colorado 

Massachusetts 

New Jersey 

Maryland 

Ohio 

California 

Oregon 

Missouri 

Washington 

Pennsylvania 

Kentucky 

Illinois 

Michigan 

Louisiana 

Connecticut 

Wisconsin 

Nebraska 

Minnesota 

Montana 

Rhode Island 

Maine 

New Hampshire 

West Virginia 

Iowa 

Tennessee 

Indiana 

Arkansas 

Texas 

Virginia 

Utah 

Arizona 

Delaware 

Georgia 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Kansas 

South Carolina 

Alabama 

Oklahoma 

Vermont 

Mississippi 



Number 
of in-, 
mates on 
Dec. 31, 
1904, per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



19.9 
17.0 
16.9 
16.7 
16.1 
14.3 
11.5 



Sex of inmates. — As in the case of the permanent 
homes, those classified as temporary show a preponder- 
ance of males over females both when number of in- 
mates and number of admissions are examined, except, 
of course, in states where the institutions are exclusivel}^ 
for females, Avhich appears to be true of the following 
19 states and territories: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, 
Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Montana, Ne- 
braska, North Carolina, North Dakota. Oklahoma, 



TEMPORARY HOMES. 



47 



South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, 
Washington, and West Virginia. The sex of the children 
in temporary homes could not be ascertained. Allow- 
ing for the institutions not specifying the number of 
children received, if any, it is apparent that there are 
lodged at any time in temporary homes from 7,000 to 
8,000 children, and that 23,000 children and upward 
are admitted to them in the course of twelve months. 
Cost of maintenance. — No definite statement of cost 
was obtainable from 24 out of the 449 temporary homes. 
The missing items relate to the least extensive institu- 
tions and would not have helped materially to swell the 
total for the United States of 13,039,035. Of this 
amount the five states. New York, Massachusetts, Penn- 
sylvania, Illinois, and Ohio, contribute more than two- 
thirds, and New York alone as much as the other four 
states mentioned, and California, New Jersey, and Mich- 
igan combined. The cost of maintenance for the states 
in the order of the amounts expended during 1904 fol- 
lows: 



States and territories ranked according to cost of maintenance of tempo- 
rary homes: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 


Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
■ 1903. 


STATE OR TERRITORY. 


Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 


United States 


83,039,035 




15 759 










1,225,959 
290,275 
277,062 
168, 126 
149, 742 
125,761 
90,971 
82,849 

56^ 967 
46,780 

461287 
39,982 
34, 657 

27] 502 
25, 132 
25, 046 
23,799 
22,342 


West Virginia 


13, 462 






















Georgia 






















Rhode Island 






North Carolina 


















Kansas 
























North Dakota 






































Louisiana 




Delaware , 




Nebraska 





































Suhsidies from public funds. — The total sum i-eceived 
by temporary homes in the form of grants from state 
and local taxes was $527,081, or 17.3 per cent of the 
entire cost of maintenance in 1903. Each state except 
Arizona, Delaware, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, 
New Jersey, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Vermont, West 
Virginia, and Wisconsin obtained shares varying from 



$200 in Texas to 1419,914 in New York. Besides New 
York, which got 79.7 per cent of the total subsidies, 
other notable beneficiaries were in California and Penn- 
S3'lvania. 

Presumably in most states the subsidies are given by 
the local community and not by the state. 

The sums given to temporary homes in each state 
and the percentage they form of the cost of maintenance 
follow: 

Annual subsidies to temporary homes from public funds and per cent of 
cost of maintenance covered by such subsidies, for specified states and 
territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Alabama 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

District of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

New Hampshire 

New York 

North Carolina 

Ohio 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Virginia 

Washington 



Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 
1903. 



Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance. 



5,235 
5,194 
1.844 
3,840 
6,300 
3,500 
4,500 



23.4 
21.4 
83.5 
6.7 



Income from pay inmates. — In not a single state are 
the temporary homes self-supporting. The income 
from pay inmates was almost exactly equal to the 
amount of subsidies, namely, $526,055, or 17.3 per cent 
of the cost of maintenance. Most of the income was 
secured by institutions making a charge for mainte- 
nance at fixed or variable weekly rates, as will pres- 
ently be shown. This does not mean, however, that 
even where charges are fixed, generous exceptions are 
not made in favor of persons without means, or that 
most of the inmates are not direct beneficiaries of the 
institutions. 



48 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



The succeeding table gives income from pay inmates, 
by states, together with tlie percentage it forms of cost 
of maintenance: 

Income from pay inmates of temporary homes and per cent of cost of 
maintenance covered by such income, for specified states and territo- 
ries: 1903. 



TERRITOEY. 



Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 
Calilornia 
Colorado 
Connecticut 
District of ( oUinibi i 
tjeorgia 
Illinois- 
Indiana 
Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentuckj 
Louisiana 
Maine 
Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
New Hampshire 
New Jer<-e\ 
New 'iork 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 
Ohio 

Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 
South Carolina 
Tennessee 
Texas 
^'■e^mont 
Virginia 
Washington 
W est \ irginia 
W isconvin 



Income 

from pay 

Inmates, 

1903. 



741 

42, 638 

714 

4,041 

472 

3,875 

300 

3,985 

10, 640 

7! 166 



Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 



23.0 
19.7 
10.1 
19.2 



6,121 


22.1 


407 


3.4 


2,309 


9.1 


2,176 


16.1 


11,565 


14.0 


172,771 


14.1 


931 


14.4 


774 


28.7 


38,225 


25.5 


400 


22.3 


2,177 


41.7 


28,175 


10.2 


1,854 


26.1 


100 


4.7 


1,444 


9.2 


133 


0.5 


60 


5.0 


1,840 


24.8 


765 


10.6 



Charges for maintenance,- — Of the 449 temporary 
homes 278 report that they do not exact payment from 
inmates; 76 have a fixed rate per week, varying from 
50 cents to $10, or an average of $2.63; 34 have variable 
rates, the lowest running from 60 to 90 cents per week, 
and the highest from $3 to $40; 57 make some charge 
where the inmate is able to pay, but not at stipulated 
rates; 1 institution did not report, and in 3 states the 
charges are nominal. 

If the 34 institutions having variable rates are charged 



with the minimum amount in each case, the average 
for the 110 institutions having fixed or variable rates 
would be about $2.60. 

In explanation of the high maximum charges made 
in a very few institutions, which make it seem doubtful 
whether thej^ really deserve to be called benevolent, it 
may be said that they harbor now and then unusual 
cases requiring a great deal of care and attention, and 
that the opportunity to obtain such sums is exceptional. 

The number of institutions reporting on the item of 
weekly charges for maintenance and the range of the 
rates are shown in the following table: 

Number of temporary homes reporting specified maintenance charges. 



WEEKLY MAINTENANCE 
CHARGE. 


Number 

of 
institu- 
tions. 


WEEKLY MAINTENANCE 
CHARGE. 


Number 

of 
institu- 
tions. 


Total reporting 


449 


Variable rates— Cont'd. 

SI 00 to 82 00 


2 




278 








Sl.OO to 84.00 










76 


81 25 to $2 50 






82.00.to 82.50 

82 00 to 83 00 






80 50 


10 

10 
14 

2 
34 


82 00 to 83 50 


$0 70 


82 00 to 84 00 










$1 00 


82 50 to $3 00 




$1 25 


82.50 to 83.50 

82.50 to 84.00 




81. .50 




$1 75 


83 00 to $4 00 




$2 00 


S3 00 to 85 00 










82 45 


S3 00 to S''0 00 
















|§25 


S3 50 to 86 00 
















8450 


85 00 to 86 00 










85.00 


$10 00 to 815 00 




810 00 




















SO 60 to SO 90 


1 


Nominal charge, etc 

No fixed rate , 








$1.00 to 81.50 .... 


57 







SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 

Table xix gives, by states and territories, a summary 
of the details presented for this class of institutions in 
Table 5, with the number designated as public, pri- 
vate, and ecclesiastical, and the ratios of inmates on 
December 31, 1904, and of admissions during 1904, per 
100,000 of population, by sex. 



50 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table XIX.— SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF 



STATE OR TEREITOKY. 



United States. 



NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONS. 



Arkansas . 
California . 
Colorado . . 



Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia. 

Florida 

Georgia 



Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory 

Indiana 

Iowa 



Kansas 

Kentucky . 
Louisiana , 

Maine 

Maryland . 



Massachusetts . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire. 
New Jersey 



New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina . 
North Dakota... 
Ohio 



Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . . 
Rhode Island... 
South Carolina . 

South Dakota... 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 



Virginia 

Washington . . . 
West Virginia . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 

AND BLIND, BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



51 



Number of 
paid em- 
ployees. 



Annual sub- 
sidy to private 
and ecclesi- 
astical insti- 
tutions, 1903. 



Income 
from pav in- 
mates, 1903. 



Cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



54, 812 
'74,'i66' 



6,326 
7,374 



27.7 
23.0 
27.4 



28.1 
26.5 
28.0 



83, 983 
12, 470 
47, 167 



22, 187 
74,553 



407, 238 






10, 334 





1, 275 



66, 301 

149, 260 
124,285 
76, 822 
38, 152 
108, 520 



100, 000 
17, 092 
174, 516 



22, 442 
78,359 
114, 015 



24.8 
28.2 
17.5 
19.1 



17.7 
20.4 
12.1 
8.2 
15.7 

19.3 
23.8 



16.7 
15.7 
14.6 



22.6 
27.4 
19.7 
17.7 



21.5 
25.0 
23.6 



4.5 


14 


15,1 


15 


1.8 


16 


16.8 


17 




18 


10,1 


19 


1.7 


20 




21 


3 ■> 


22 


6,4 


23 


19.3 


24 


IH.,-! 


25 


4.3 


26 


6.3 


97 


8.5 


28 



19.9 
25.1 
2.3.1 



52 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



The specific reasons which lead to the inclusion of 
schools and homes for the deaf and blind among be- 
nevolent institutions were stated in the introductory 
remarks. Although it must be free!}' conceded that 
about all the public establishments for the deaf and 
blind are parts of the public school sj^stem of their 
respective states, this is not true of those under private 
or ecclesiastical management, which together number 
not far from one-half of the total. The primary pur- 
pose of the latter may also be educational. In all three 
classes of institutions it is true that the pupils or in- 
mates are recipients of a benevolence not extended to 
the more fortunate members of society. This, how- 
ever, is not equivalent to declaring them objects of 
charity. 

The following 8 states and territories are without 
special institutions for the deaf and blind: Arizona, 
Delaware, Idaho, Nevada, New Hampshire, New 
Mexico, Vermont, and Wyoming. Most states and 
territories have adopted the policy of making sep- 
arate provisions for these special classes, affording 
both education and institutional care at public cost. 
The exceptions are Connecticut, the District of 
Columbia, Indian Territory, and Massachusetts, in 
which institutions under private control supply 
wholly the needs in the case. The Si institutions of 
that class are found in the states mentioned and in 
Maryland, Missouri, New York, Ohio, and Pennsyl- 
vania. Onl}^ 15 are maintained by church bodies, and 
these are in California, Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, 
Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and 
Wisconsin, no less than 5 of them being in New York. 
Day schools for the deaf and blind are not included. 

Nimiher of inmates. — The total number of inmates 
found on January 1, 1904, was 15,153, which at the end 
of the year had been reduced by 422. The number of 
persons admitted during 1904 amounted to 7,025, or 
less than one-half as many as were in institutions at the 
beginning or at the end of the year. 

The following table shows that as regards this class 
of institutions there is no definite ratio between the 
population of a state and the number of inmates on the 
census dates or the number of persons admitted during 
the 3'ear: 



States and territories ranked according to proportional number of per- 
sons admitted during 1904 to schools and homes for the deaf and 
blind, and also according to proportional number of inmates on 
December 31, 1904. 



STATE OR TEKEITORY, 



Tennessee 

Texas 

South Dakota 

West Virginia 

Minnesota 

California 

District of Columbia 

North Dakota 

Indiana 

Kansas 

Oklahoma 

Alabama 

Arkansas 

Mississippi 

South Carolina 

Louisiana 

Illinois 

Oregon 

Ohio 

Nebraska 

Wisconsin 

Michigan 

Georgia 

North Carolina 

Connecticut 

New York 

Colorado 

Montana 

Utah 

Indian Territory . . . 

Missouri 

Washington 

Massachusetts 

Kentucky 

Florida 

Maryland 

Pennsylvania 

Iowa 

Maine 

Virginia 

Rhode Island 

New Jersey *... 



Number 
admitted 

during 

1904 per 
100,000 of 

popula- 
tion. 



25.0 
23.6 
21.5 
20.9 
19,6 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Number 

of in- 
mates on 
Dec. 31, 
1904, per 
100,000 of 
popula- 
tion. 



District of Columbia. 

Utah 

North Carolina , 

Arkansas 

Colorado 

Connecticut , 

New York , 

Nebraska 

California 

South Dakota 

Texas 

Maryland 

Oregon 

Montana 

Tennessee 

Kentucky 

West Virginia 

Kansas 

Washington 

Michigan 

Ohio 

Indiana 

North Dakota 

Massachusetts 

Pennsylvania 

Iowa 

Wisconsin 

Missouri 

Illinois 

Florida 

Louisiana 

Oklahoma 

Rhode Island 

Maine 

Alabama 

South Carolina 

Georgia 

Virginia 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

New Jersey 

Indian Territory 



22.6 
21.6 
21.4 
21.1 
21.0 
20.7 
20.1 
19.4 
19.2 
19.1 
18.0 
17.5 
17.2 
17.1 
16.0 
15.9 
15.8 
15.3 
14.4 



Although New York has many institutions of the 
kind under consideration and an enormous population, 
she stands twenty-sixth among the states in the ratio 
of admissions to schools and homes for the deaf and 
blind per 100,000 inhabitants. Or, to put it differently, 
the ratio of admissions is five times as large in Tennes- 
see, and four and one-half times in Texas, South 
Dakota, and West Virginia. On the whole, the ratio 
of admissions seeras generall}^ at variance with the facts 
observed in regard to admissions to other classes of in- 
stitutions in the different states. The high number of 
admissions in some of the Southern states is a striking 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 



53 



feature of which the available data afford no reason- 
able explanation. In general, however, it may be stated 
that unusual rates of admissions to institutions for the 
deaf and blind can not be attributed to the establish- 
ment of new institutions, for only one of this class 
was opened in the year preceding the census inquir3\ 
What has been said about the ratio of admissions is 
largelj^ true of the ratio of inmates on the census dates 
to 100,000 of population. Here, also, some Southern 
states come markedly to the fore with ratios surpassing 
those of the Middle states and of several of the North 
Atlantic group. 

Sex of inmates. — The preponderance of males is slight, 
but holds true in regard to the whole number of inmates 
on both the dates given as well as in regard to the num- 
ber of admissions. With some unimportant variations 
the same relation of the sexes is observable when the 
figures for the single states are examined, although the 
excess of males is less marked among the persons ad- 
mitted during the year. 

Cost of maintenance. — Of the total cost of mainte- 
nance of $3,523,683, about 65 per cent was expended 
in the maintenance of the public institutions. The cost 
of the private institutions forms 29.7 per cent of the 
whole, and that of the ecclesiastical but 4.6 per cent. 
Relative to population and the amounts devoted to 
other forms of benevolence, the outlay on behalf of the 
deaf and blind is noticeably large in some of the South- 
ern states, as will be seen from the following schedule 
of cost in the order of the amounts given in each state 
and territory: 



StateB and territories ranked according to cost of maintenance of schools 
and homes for the deaf and blind: 1903. 



STATE OK TERKITOBY. 



New York 

Pennsylvania ...... 

Illinois 

Ohio 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Texas 

Missouri 

Indiana 

North Carolina 

Kentucky 

California , 

Connecticut 

Distri c t of Columbia 

Iowa 

Arkansas 

Wisconsin 

Tennessee , 

Minnesota 

Maryland 

Alabama 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 



$597, 621 
317, 758 
206, 176 
174, 516 
149, 260 
124, 285 
114, 015 
108, 520 
103, 854 
100, 000 
96, 736 
86, 322 

83i 983 
81, 127 
81, 064 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Colorado 

Nebraska , 

New Jersey 

Kansas 

Georgia 

West Virginia . . 

Virginia 

Mississippi 

Louisiana 

Utah 

South Carolina . . 

Oregon 

South Dakota . . . 

Washington 

Rhode Island 

Maine 

Montana 

Oklahoma 

North Dakota . . . 

Florida 

Indian Territory 



Cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 



Subsidies from public funds. — A total of $884,772 
was distributed among private and ecclesiastical insti- 
tutions of five states and the District of Columbia. 



The amount given to each and the percentage it makes 
of the total cost are shown below: 

Annual subsidies from public funds to schools and homes for the deaf 
and blind, and per cent of cost of maintenance covered by such 
subsidies, for specified states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OK TERRITORY. 


Annual 
subsidies 
from pub- 
lic funds, 
1903. 


Per cent 
of cost of 
mainte- 
nance, 
1903. 




8407,238 
251,882 
74,553 
74,100 
54,812 
22,187 








Massachusetts 


49 9 










Maryland 


33 5 







California, Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, 

New Jerse}', Ohio, Wisconsin, and Indian Territory, 
all of which have private or ecclesiastical schools and 
homes for the deaf and blind, did not grant subsidies 
to them. 

Income from pay inmates. — This was $100,693 for the 
whole country, of which but $18,631 were received by 
public institutions. Those under private management 
obtained 71.5 per cent of the whole amount, and the 
ecclesiastical 10 per cent. 

The total cost of maintenance of private and ecclesias- 
tical institutions was $1,209,769. At the same time 
they had a revenue from subsidies and payments by 
inmates of $966,834, leaving an amount of $242,935 to 
be raised in other ways. The burden of this fell, of 
course, chiefly upon institutions in the states not grant- 
ing subsidies. 

All told, the institutions of 20 states had more or less 
income from inmates, as shown below, together with the 
amounts and percentages of total cost. The 22 states 
showing no income maintain schools and homes for the 
deaf and blind exclusively at public cost. 

Income from pay inmates of schools and homes for the deaf and 
blind, and per cent of cost of maintenance covered by such income, 
for specified states and territories: 1903. 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 



Massachusetts 

New York 

Maryland 

Pennsylvania 

Connecticut 

Illinois 

Colorado 

District of Columbia. 

Utah 

Washington 

New Jersey 

Maine 

Missouri 

Ohio 

Michigan 

South Carolina 

Louisiana 



Income 
from pay 



$32, 672 
10, 334 
9,007 



5,330 
4,094 
2,349 
2,202 



GENERAL TABLES 



(55). 



56 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



IME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



ALABAMA. 

Eastlake Orphans' Home 

Evergreen: 

Louise Short Baptist Home 

Mobile: 

' Church Home 

206 Warren street. 

Industrial School for Catholic Orphan Bovs 

3 Lafayette street. 

Protestant Orphan Asylum 

859 Dauphin way. 

St. Mary's Female Orphan Asylum 

Conti and Franklin .streets. 
Summers eld: 

Alabama Methodist Orphanage 

Talladega: 

Presbyterian Orphans' Home 

ARKANSAS. 
Fort Smith: 

Children's Home 

Nineteenth street. 
Hot Springs: 

Industrial and Training School 

Little Rock: 

Arkansas Methodist Orphanage 

Children's Home 

416 East Fifth street. 
Monticello: 

Arkansas Baptist Orphans' Home 

CALIFORNIA. 
Anaheim: 

St. Catherine's Orphan Asylum 

Berkeley: 

Receiving Home, The 

1921 Russell street. 
Fresno: 

Fresno County Orphanage 

Fruitvale: 

Fred Finch Orphanage 

Garden a: 

McKinley Industrial Home 

Gilroy: 

Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home 

Grass Valley: 

St. Patrick's Boys' Orphan Asylum 

St. Vincent's Girls' Orphan Asylum 

Kelseyville: 

Hurlbutt Orphans' Home 

Los Angeles: 

Christian Orphanage 

1724 Kent street. 
Frances De Pauw Industrial School 

Prospect Park. 
Home of the Guardian Angel 

333 South Figueroa street. 
King's Daughters' Day Nursery , 

306 Amelia street. 
Los Angeles Orphan Asylum and School 

Boyle Heights. 
News and Working Bovs' Home 

808 San Pedro street. 
Victoria Home 

901 East Twenty-fifth street. 
Lytton Springs: 

Golden Gate Orphanage 

Mills College: 

Beulah Orphanage, The 

Oakland: 

West Oakland Home , 

973 Campbell street. 

Pasadena: 

Pasadena Children's Training Society 

Corner Wilson avenue and Delmar street. 



Sisters of Charity 

Baptist Church of Alabama ' 

Episcopal Diocese of Alabama 

Brothers of the Sacred Heart 

Protestant Orphan Asylum Society 

Sisters of Charity 

Alabama Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 

Synod of Alabama 

Children's Home Board 

Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South 

Private corpora tion : 

Arkansas Baptist Church 

Female Religious of the Third Order 
of St. Dominic. 

Children's Home Finding Society of 
California. 

Fresno county 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

Rebekah Assembly , Independent Order 
of Odd Fellows of California. 

Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church , 

Sisters of Mercy 

King's Dp,ughters 

Sisters of Charity 

{-) 
Children's Home Society of California . 

Salvation Army 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

1 Opened July, 1903. 



Care of homeless orphans 

Care and training of indigent orphans 

Training children for citizenship 

Care and training of orphan boys 

Care of indigent orphans 

Care of orphan girls 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Girls. 



Care and training of orphan children. 
Support of destitute children 



Both. 
Both. 



Care of orphan and friendless children. 



Care of homeless and destitute children 



Care of orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans. 



Care of orphans . 



Care of orphan and half orphan boys . 

Care of homeless children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and aban- 
doned children. 

Care of orphan and indigent boys 



Boys . 
Both. 
Both. 
Both . 



Care of orphan boys. 
Care of orphan girls. 



Care of orphan children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of children of working mothers. 
Care and education of orphan girls.. 

Care of homeless boys 

Care of homeless children 



Boys. 
Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 

Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 

Girls. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



1861 
1847 



1890 
1868 



1899 
1886 



1894 
1901 
1895 
1891 



1900 



{=) 
1895 
1887 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 



57 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitte'1 during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



11, 846 
■2. 766 



Income 
from pay 
inmates, 



1,993 
6,665 



2,400 
1,597 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 



$7, 200 



1, 200 11 
1, 500 12 



11, 873 
900 
5,379 

14,656 : 17 

10,000 I 18 

8,000 ' 20 

12,000 I 21 

(2) : 22 

3,000 ! 23 

2,600 ' 24 



9,890 
914 
28, 748 
1,653 
1,943 

2,532 



58 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' I 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



CALIFORNIA— Continued. 
Sacramento: 

Sacramento Foundling Home 

Ninth street. 

Sacramento Protestant Orphan Asvlum 

1816 K street. 

Stanford Lathrop Memorial Home 

N street between Eighth and Ninth streets. 
San Anselmo: 

San Francisco Presbyterian Orphanage and Farm 

San Bernardino: 

St. Catherine's Orphan Asylum 

Fifth and E streets. 
San Bernardino Orphans' Home 

San Diego: 

San Diego Children's Home 

Sixteenth and Ash streets. 
San Diego Industrial School 

State and F streets. 
San Francisco: 

Boys and Girls' Home School 

Grove and Baker .streets. 
Foundling Asylum of the San Francisco Lying-in- 
Hospital. 

Point Lobus avenue. 
McKiuley Orphanage, The 

3841 Nineteenth street. 
Maria Kip Orphanage 

520 Lake street. 
Mount St. Joseph's Infant Orphan Asylum 

Silver avenue. 
Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum 

600 Davisadero street. 
Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum 

N street and Nineteenth avenue. 
San Francisco Nursery for Homeless Children 

1534 Mission street. 
San Francisco Protestant Orphan Asylum 

Youth's Directorv 

3561 Nineteenth street. 
San Jose: 

Home of Benevolence 

Martha and Whitney streets. 

Josephlnum Orphanage 

San Juan: 

St. John's Institute 

San Mateo; 

Armitage Orphanage, The _.-. 

San Rafael: 

St. Vincent's Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum 

Santa Barbara: 

St. Vincent's Institution .• 

De La Vina street. 
South Pasadena: 

Home for Friendless Children 

Stockton : 

Children' s Home 

Vallejo: 

Good Templar.s' Home 

Watsonville: 

Pajaro Valley Orphan Asylum 

COLORADO. 
Colorado Springs: 

Colorado Springs Dav Nursery 

816 South Tejon street. 
Denver: 

Belle Lenox Nursery , 

2949 West Thirty-seventh avenue. 

Colorado Children's Home 

3545 Raleigh street. 
Colorado State Home for Dependent and Neglected 
Children. 

2309 South Clarkson street. 

Day Nursery - ■ 

1420 Champa street. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 



Sisters of Mercy . 



Care of foundlings, orphans, and half 

orphans. 
Care and education of orphan, half 

orphan, and destitute children. 
Care of abandoned children 



Presbyterian Churcl 



Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of 

Mary. 
Associated Charities 



Private corporation 
Private corporation 



Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan and half orphan girls. 



Care of needy and destitute children. 



Boys and Girls' Aid Society Care and reformation of wayward 

boys. 

Private corporation Care of abandoned children 



California Conference of the Methodist 

Episcopal Church. 
Episcopal Diocese of California 



Sisters of Charity . 



Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum and 

Home Society. 
Sisters of Charity 



Private corporation . 



St. Joseph's Union. 



Private corporation 
Dominican Sisters.. 



Episcopal Church 



Brothers of the Christian Schools. 
Sisters of Charity 



Boys and Girls' Aid Society . 
Ladies' Aid Society 



Fraternity corporation . 
Franciscan Fathers 



Care and training of girls . 



Care of Jewish orphan children. 



Care of destitute and friendless orphans 

and half orphans. 
Care of homeless children 



Care and education of orphans. 



Care of orphan, half orphan, and 
abandoned girls. 



Care of orphan and abandoned boys. 
Care of orphan and abandoned girls 



Temporary care of children under 14 



Care and education of orphan children 



Care and education of orphan and 
abandoned boys. 



Care of children of working mothers. . 



City Temple Institutional Society ' Care of homeless children. 

Colorado Children's Home Society ' Care of homeless children. 



State of Colorado . . . 
Private corporation 



Care of children of working mothe 



Both.. 
Both.. 
Girls.. 

Both.. 
Girls.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 

Boys.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 
Girls.. 



Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Girls. 



Boys — 
Girls.... 

Both..., 
Both... 
Both..., 
Boys..., 

Both... 

Both..., 
B.oth..., 
Both.... 

Both.... 



• State sub.sidy of $100 per year each for orphans and $75 for half orphans. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



59 



NUMBEK OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




54 


32 


22 


31 


19 


12 


56 


31 


25 


10 


86, 739 


8720 


87, 963 


34 


102 


50 


52 


0) 


0) 


(>) 


(') 


0) 


(') 


10 


(') 


1,975 


11,641 


35 


■20 





20 


30 





30 


20 





20 


4 





872 


3,078 


36 


106 




46 


(') 


(') 


(1) 


(1) 


(') 


0) 


9 


6,000 


2,255 


9,782 


37 


38 





38 


13 





13 


29 





29 


4 


5,599 


345 


2,051 


38 


31 


19 


12 


12 


10 


2 


22 


13 


9 


3 


2,160 


773 


3,060 


39 


48 


19 


29 


29 


11 


18 


62 


21 


31 


5 


1,800 





4,226 


40 


160 


65 


95 


150 


60 


90 


140 


40 


100 


1 








350 


41 


101 


101 





149 


149 





103 


103 


. 


12 


6,000 


1,995 


18, 433 


42 


33 


19 


14 


(') 


(') 


(') 


0) 


(1) 


(') 


7 


{') 


89 


4,000 


43 


83 


29 


54 


32 


11 


21 


74 


24 


50 


6 


5,994 


1,307 


5, 155 


44 


109 





109 


27 





27 


94 





94 


10 


8,379 


1, 6-56 


13, 028 


45 


331 


136 


195 


229 


112 


117 


292 


120 


172 


24 


24,268 


1,613 


34, 956 


46 


194 


96 


98 


11 


6 


5 


181 


81 


100 


31 


11,935 





34,847 


47 


400 





400 


101 





101 


375 





375 


19 


25, 976 





34,828 


48 


75 


39 


36 


20 


9 


11 


63 


30 




9 


3,138 


2,013 


8,312 


49 


162 


92 


70 


62 


34 


28 


185 


103 


82 


17 


11, 500 


1,372 


12, 790 


50 


76 


76 





700 


700 





68 


68 





5 





120 


15, 700 


51 


101 


53 


48 


38 


19 


19 


90 


55 


35 


8 


5,731 


563 


8, 005 


52 


109 


35 


74 


18 





18 


75 





75 





11, 152 


577 


16,819 


53 


80 





80 


(1) 


(') . 


0) 


0) 


(') 


{>) 


2 


0) 


5, 910 


6,896 


54 


186 


166 





61 


61 





171 


171 





13 


10,845 


3,000 


9,000 


55 


506 


506 





304 


304 





519 


519 





34 


38, 360 


1,362 


40, 233 


56 


59 





59 


26 


^ 


23 


64 


3 


61 


3 








8,348 


57 


89 


60 


29 


63 


41 


22 


85 


64 


21 


6 


6,700 


2,396 


9,355 


.58 


27 


16 


11 


13 


7 


6 


26 


16 


10 


3 








3,866 


59 


189 


126 


63 


55 


34 


21 


175 


117 


58 


18 


15, 000 


2,739 


22,534 


60 


226 


226 





102 


102 





220 


220 





18 


15,115 


1,127 


27,261 


61 


25 


15 


10 








25 


14 


11 


3 





998 


2,115 


62 


65 


50 


15 


48 


39 


9 


51 


44 




8 







' 




9 


5 


4 


27 


19 


8 


12 


7 


5 


4 


500 





3,200 


64 


140 

45 


106 
20 


34 
25 


84 



44 


40 


147 
50 


109 
24 


26 


16 

2 





56 


21, 425 
2,023 


65 


500 


66 











3 state subsid>- of 8150 per year each for foundlings, 8100 for orphans, and 875 for half orphans. 



60 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 
when 
found- 



COLORADO— Continued. 

Denver— Continued. 

Denver Orphans' Home 

Colfax avenue and Denver street. 
E. M. Byers Home for Boys 

64 West Alameda avenue. 
Home League Orphanage, The 

Fifteenth street and College avenue. 
St. Clara's Orphanage 

952 Champa street. 
St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum 

Highlands Station. 
West Side Day Nursery 

966 South Water street. 
Pueblo: 

Pueblo Children's Home 

Lake and Abriendo avenues. 
Sacred Heart Orphanage 

Sprague avenue. 

CONNECTICUT. 
Bridgeport: 

Bridgeport Protestant Orphan Asylum 

Ellsworth street. 
Cromwell: 

Swedish Christian Orphanage 

Danbury: 

Danbury Home, The 

Darien: 

Volunteers' Children's Home 

Haddam; 

Middlesex County Temporary Home 

Hartford: 

Hartford Orphan Asylum 

171 Putnam street. 

St. James Orphan Asylum 

93 Church street. 
Meriden: 

Day Nursery. 

79 West Main street. 
Mt. Carmel: 

Mt. Carmel Children's Home, The 

New Britain: 

Children's Home, The 

Black Rock road. 
New Haven: 

Mothers' Aid Society Day Nurseries 

New Haven County Temporary Home 

Shelton avenue and Bassett street. 

N ew Haven Orphan Asylum, The 

610 Elm street. 

St. Francis Orphan Asylum, The 

Whitney avenue and Highland street 
Newington: 

Virginia T. Smith Home for Incurables 

Norwalk: 

Fairfield County Temporary Home 

Norwich: 

■ New London County Temporary Home 

Smith avenue. 

Rock Nook Children's Home 

Putnam: 

Windham County Temporary Home 

Providence road. 
Stamford: 

Day Nursery, The 

Greyrock place. 

Stamford Children's Home 

938 East Main street. 
Vernon: 

Tolland County Temporary Home 

Warehouse Point: 

Hartford County Temporary Home 

Waterbury: 

St. Mary's Day Nursery 

Scoville and Franklin streets. 

Waterbury Day Nursery, The 

46 Kingsbury street. 

Winsted: 

William L. Gilbert Home, The 



Denver Orphans' Home Association . . 

E. M . Byers Boys' Home Society 

Home League of America 

Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Associated Charities of Pueblo 

Franciscan Sisters 

Private corporation 

Swedish Eastern Missionary Associa- 
tion. 

Private corporation 

Volunteers of America 

Middlesex county 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Young Woman's Christian Association 
and City Mission. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private association 

New Haven county 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Connecticut Children's Aid Society. . . 

Fairfield county 

New London county 

United WDrkers 

Windham county 

Private association 

Children's Home Society 

Tolland county 

Hartford county 

Sisters of Charity 

Waterbury Day Nursery Association . . 

Private corporation 

1 Not reported. 



Care of destitute and homeless chil- 
dren. 
Care of homeless and friendless boys. . 

Care of orphans, waifs, and indigent 

children. 
Care of orphans 

Care of Indigent orphans ; . . 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of destitute children 

Care and education of orphans 



Care of orphan and destitute children. . 

Care of orphans and neglected chil- 
dren of Scandinavian parentage. 

Care of orphan, abandoned, and neg- 
lected children. 

Care of poor and unprotected children. 

Care of neglected and dependent chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and neg- 
lected children. 

Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan and neglected children. 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 
Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and indi- 
gent children. 

Care of incurable children 

Care of neglected and destitute children 
Care of neglected and destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of neglected and destitute children 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 
Care of orphan and neglected children. 

Care of neglected and destitute children 
Care of neglected and destitute children 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of homeless children 



Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESEKIES— Continued. 



61 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 
from pay 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 



262 
■ Opened April 



84,321 


$10,277 


960 


2, 862 


301 


3,001 


(1) 


(>) 


5,734 


12, 783 



2, 971 
0) 



1,749 
10, 872 



840 
5,867 

171 
556 



370 
9,342 



3,47 



1,592 


4,138 


1,105 


1,402 


n 


0) 


5,822 


7,573 


3,824 


18, 000 





3,000 



3,450 
23, 471 



19, 296 
6,881 
3,744 
6,567 

1,948 
3, 620 

4,875 
15,000 
{-) 

1,561 

26, 093 



62 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



DELAWARE. 
Clayton: 

St. Joseph's Industrial School 

Delaware City: 

St. James Protectory 

Wilmington: 

Delaware Orphans' Home and Industrial School 

1123 Walnut street. 
Home for Friendless and Destitute Children 

River View. 
St. Joseph's Home 

Eleventh and French streets. 
St. Peter's Female Orphan Asylum 

Sixth and West streets. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington : 

Bell Home 

Franklin street (Anacostia). 
Children's Temporary Home 

607 Howard avenue NW. 
Dav Nursery for Colored Children 

67 0" .street NW. 
District of Columbia Industrial Home School 

2525 Wisconsin avenue NW. 
German Orphan Asylum 

Goodhope road (Anacostia). 
St. Agnes Industrial Home 

3017 street NW. 
St. Ann's Infant Asylum 

Twenty-fourth and K streets NW. 
St. John' s Orphanage 

Twentieth and F streets NW. 
St. Joseph's Male Orphan Asylum 

H and Tenth streets NW. 
St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum 

Fourth and Cincinnati streets NE. 
Social Settlement Day Nursery 

118 M street SW. 
Washington City Orphan Asvlum 

1739 Fourteenth street NW. 
Washington Hospital for Foundlings 

1715 Fifteenth street NW. 
Woman's League Day Nurserv 

1931 Twelfth street NW. 

Working Boys' Home 

230 C .street NW. 

FLORIDA. 
Arcadia: 

Florida Baptist Orphanage 

Belleview: 

Orphans' Home 

Jacksonville: 

Orphans' and Industrial Home 

1628 Franklin street. 

St. Mary's Home .' 

Church and Ocean streets. 
Orangehill: 

Nettis Colored Orphans' Home 

St. Augustine: 

Trinity Home School for Girls 

Tampa: 

Children's Home 

Florida avenue. 

Clementina Gil Day Nursery 

1611 Eleventh avenue. 

GEORGIA. 
Atlanta: 

Hebrew Orphans' Home 

Washington street. 

Leonard Street Orphans' Home 

39 Leonard street. 
Augusta: 

Augusta Orphan Asylum 

Railroad avenue and Hooper .street. 

I Opened March 5. 1904 



St. Joseph's Society for Colored Mis- 
sions. 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

St. Joseph's Society of the Sacred Heart 

for Colored Missions. 
Sisters of Charity 

Episcopal Church 

Private association 

Private corporation 

District of Columbia 

German Orphan Asylum Association.. 

Sisters of the Epiphany ; 

Sisters of Charity 

Church Orphanage Association 

Sisters of the Holy Cross 

Sisters of Charity 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Colored Woman's League 

Working Boys' Home and Children's 
Aid Association. 

Baptists of Florida 

Second Bethlehem Baptist Association 
arid Women's District Convention of 
Florida. 

Orphans' and Industrial Home Associ- 
ation. 
Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private association 

Episcopal Sisters of the Resurrection. . 

Private corporation 

Day Nursery Association 

Independent Order B'nai B'rith 

Private association 

Augusta Orphan Asylum Association. . 



Care of destitute and orphan boys | Boys. 

Both 
Both. 

Care of colored orphan boys | Boys, 



Care of orphan girls 



Care of orphans and homeless children. 

Care of neglected colored children 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 



Care of orphans and half orphans. 
Care of homeless girls 



Care of foundlings, orphans, and half 
orphans. 



Care of orphan, dependent, and home- 
Care of orphan girls 



of working 
Care of orphans and destitute children. 
Care of foundlings 



Care of orphans and destitute children 
Care of orphan children 



Training and education of orphans . 
Care of orphan girls 



Care of poor colored orphans 

Care of destitute white girls 

Care of orphan and indigent children . 
Care of children of working mothers. . 



Care of Hebrew orphans 

To provide a home for colored girls 



To provide a home for Richmond Both, 
county orphans. 

-' Not reported. 



Girls, 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 

Both 
Both 

Both 
Girls. 



Girls. 
Both 
Both 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



63 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 



On Januarv 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



"Opened October, 1903. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 
from pay 
inmates, 



(1) 


(') 


3,448 


23, 629 


113 


6,654 


225 


2, 112 


1,014 


9, 045 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance. 



$16, 000 
2,000 
2,057 



4,000 


114 


7,187 


115 


13, 000 


116 


(') 


117 


1,600 


118 


7,985 


119 


473 


120 


3,510 


121 



153 
1,460 



' Opened February 1, 1904. 



64 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



v'D LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


Botli.... 


1888 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1900 


Girls.... 


1840 


Both.... 


1884 


Both.... 


1869 


Both.... 


1888 


Girls.... 


1868 


Both.... 


1896 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1873 


Boys.... 


1894 


Boys.... 


1740 


Both.... 


1896 


Girls.... 


1844 


Both.... 


1897 


Girls.... 


1876 


Girls.... 


1750 


Girls.... 


1903 


Boys.... 


1869 


Both.... 


1873 


Both.... 


1883 


Both.... 


1867 


Both.... 


1901 


Girls.... 


1888 


Both.... 


1902 


Both.... 


1866 


Both 


1897 


Both.... 


1893 


Girls.... 


1889 


Both.... 


1865 


Both.... 


1849 


Both.... 


1884 


Both 


1897 


Both.... 


1888 



GEORGIA— Continued. 

Augusta— Continued. 

Sheltering Arms ^ 

1924 Pearl avenue. 

Shiloh Industrial Orphanage . . : 

Bolingbroke: 

Tyler Orphanage 

Columbus: 

Girls' Orphan Home 

Fourth avenue and Fifteenth street. 



King's Daughters 

Shiloh Association 

Private corporation 

Ladies' Benevolent Society 



Decatur: 

Orphans' Home of the North Georgia Conference . 



Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South. 
Baptist Church of Georgia 



Macon : 

Appleton Church Home — 
Gad S. Johnson Orphanage . 



Episcopal Diocese of Georgia. 
Baptist Church of Georgia . . . 



Georgia Colored Industrial and Orphans' Home 



Private corporation 



Georgia Industrial Home 

South Georgia Conference Orphans' Home . 
St. Simons Mills: 

Anson Dodge Home 

Savannah: 

Bethesda Orphans' Home 



Episcopal Orphans' Home . 
309 Liberty street W. 



Thirty-first and Montgomery streets. 
St. Mary's Home 

1604 Habersham street. 
Savannah Female Asylum 

Oglethorpe avenue and West Broad street. 
Thomasville: 

Vashti Blasingame Industrial Home and School.. 



Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South. 



Private corporation 

Union Society 

United States Union Association 

Episcopal churches of Savannah 

King's Daughters 

Female Orphan Benevolent Society. 
Private corporation 



Joseph's Orphanage . 



Women's Home Mission Society of the 
Methodist Episcopal Church, South. 



Sisters of St. Joseph. 



ILLINOIS. 
Addison: 

German Evangelical Lutheran Orphan Asylum . 

Alton: 

St. Joseph's Catholic Orphan Asylum ' 'Sisters of the Precious Blood 

417 Prospect street. 
Andover: ' 

Swedish Lutheran Orphans' Home ! Illinois Conference of Augustana Syn- 

I od of North America. 
Belleville: 

St. John's Catholic Orphanage I Sisters of the Poor Handmaids of Jesus 



(Glen Addie.) 



Cairo: 

Cairo Children's Home 

324 Twenty-fifth street. 
Chicago: 

Angel Guardian Orphan Asylui 
401 Devon avenue. 



I Creche 

Fifth avenue and Fifty-second street. 

Chicago Home for Jewish Orphans 

Sixty-second street and Drexel avenue. 



Chicago Nursery and Half Orphan Asylum. 
175 Burling street. 



Emeline Thomas Dav Nursery. . 

531 West Superior street. 
Englewood Infant Nursery 

6516 Perry avenue. 



Christ. 

Girls' Industrial Home Association 

Illinois Children's Home and Aid .So- 
ciety. 

Angel Guardian German Catholic Or- 
phan Society. 
Woman's League of Bethlehem Creche. 

Associated Jewish Charities of Chicago. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Danish Evangelical Lutheran Church . 

Thomas Day Nursery Associa- 

s Home and Aid So- 

Not reported. 



Emeli 

tion. 
Illinois Child 

ciety. 



Care of children of working people 

Care and education of orphans 

Care of destitute and homeless chil- 
dren. 
Care of orphan and destitute girls 

Care of needy colored children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of needy orphans 

Care and training of orphan girls 

Care and industrial training of colored 

orphans. 
Care of friendless colored orphans and 

waifs. 

Care of homeless children 

Care an d education of indigent orphans 

Care of homeless boys until of age 

Care of orphans and other helpless 

male children. 
Care of orphan and indigent children 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of female orphans 

Care of orphan girls 

Care and training of helpless and home- 
less girls. 

Care of Catholic orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of helpless orphans 

Care of orphans 

Care and education of friendless or- 
phans. 

Care of dependent giris 

Care of needy and dependent children 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of dependent Jewish orphans and 

half orphans. 
Care of dependent girls 

Care of working women's children and 
half orphans. 

Care of orphan and dependent chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of dependent children 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



65 



NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




23 


13 


10 








51 


0) 
25 


0) 
26 


2 


80 


«0 


$1,275 


133 


51 


26 


25 


4 


3 


1 




6 


134 


23 


13 


10 


3 


2 


1 


11 


6 


5 





150 





700 


135 


18 





18 


0) 


(') 


0) 


0) 


(M 


(1) 


2 








1,300 


136 


46 


19 


27 


12 


5 


7 


58 


24 


34 


2 





298 


650 


137 


150 


70 


80 


125 


65 


60 


135 


72 


63 


14 








14,000 


138 


107 


40 


67 


22 


13 


9 


100 


40 


60 


8 








12,000 


139 


25 
23 




8 


25 
15 


5 
29 



11 


5 
18 


25 
21 



9 


25 
12 














1,920 
1,000 


140 
141 


34 


12 


22 


19 


11 


8 


48 


22 


26 


2 





60 


2,200 


142 


130 
106 


65 
58 


65 
53 


0) 
61 


0) 


0) 

34 


0) 
106 


0) 
59 


(1) 
47 


7 
6 










8,100 
6,000 


143 
144 


15 


15 





5 


5 





18 


18 





4 





200 


2,000 


145 


124 


124 





6 


6 





107 


107 





15 


1,000 





10, 700 


146 


24 


14 


10 


• 36 


19 


17 


36 


19 


17 


3 


765 





835 


147 


35 





35 


0) 


(1) 


0) " 


(>) 


(^) 


(') 


2 








2,387 


148 


, 35 


10 


25 








0) 
60 


0) 




0) 

60 


4 





0) 

240 


840 


149 


55 





55 


15 





15 





3,000 


1.50 


44 





44 


6 





6 


39 





39 


2 


780 





4,200 


151 


3 





3 


17 





17 


19 





19 


2 





(-) 


(-) 


152 


52 


52 





12 


12 





49 


49 





•4 





100 


4,000 


153 


111 


59 


52 


16 


1 


9 


118 


57 


61 


14 





^459 


7,728 


154 


64 


30 


34 


42 


20 


22 


62 


30 


32 








800 


3,000 


155 


55 


■ 38 


17 


13 


9 


4 


59 


40 


19 


5 





30 


5,000 


156 


71 


37 


34 


37 


20 


17 


99 


51 


48 








4,844 


4,771 


157 


23 





23 


4 





4 


19 





19 


3 





2,879 


2,523 


158 


8 


4 


4 


33 


20 


13 


13 


11 


2 


1 








600 


159 


469 


257 


212 


217 


120 


97 


480 


263 


217 


4 





8,042 


20,232 


160 


15 


8 


7 








15 


g 


7 


2 






213 



1, 025 
14, 000 


161 

162 


166 


109 


57 


24 


15 


9 


158 


101 


57 


17 


179 





179 


327 





327 


221 





221 


3 


10,000 


3,610 


18,319 


163 


163 


84 


79 


133 


75 


58 


154 


81 


73 


30 





4,773 


21, 576 


164 


161 


108 


53 


126 


80 


46 


184 


124 


60 


48 





8,967 


26, 626 


165 


25 


16 


9 











22 


15 


^ 7 


4 





217 


2,060 


166 


29 


14 


15 








29 
55 


16 
34 


13 
21 







200 


1,075 
2,463 


167 
168 


19 


10 




346 


175 


171 


5 






= Opened October 1, 1903. 



66 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


Both.... 


1893 


Both.... 


1901 


Both.... 


1890 


Both.... 


1884 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1885 


Both.... 


1900 


Both.... 


1903 


Boys 


1888 


Boys.... 


1868 


Both.... 


1899 


Girls.... 


1864 


Boys 


1889 


Girls.... 


1894 


Both.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1868 


Boys.... 


1896 


Both.... 


1891 


Both.... 


1896 


Both.... 


1894 


Both.... 


1902 


Both.... 


1896 


Both.... 


1903 


Boys 


1882 


Both.... 


1896 


Both.... 


1896 


Boys.... 


1887 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1895 


Both.... 


1897 


Both.... 


1896 


Both.... 


1894 


Boys.... 


1895 


Both.... 


1889 



ILLINOIS— Continued. 

Chicago — Continued. 

Home for Destitute Crippled Children 

46 Park avenue. 
Home of the Jewish Friendless 

1-3 Ogden Front. 

Hull House Day Nursery 

335 South Halsted street. 

Illinois Masonic Orphans' Home 

447 Carroll avenue. 
Juvenile Detention Home 

625 West Adams street. 
Margaret Etter Creche 

2421 Wabash avenue. 
Marie Cr&che 

2340 Wentvvorth avenue. 
Metropolitan Children's Home 

1541 Franklin boulevard. 
Mission of Our Lady of Mercy 

363 West Jackson boulevard. 
Newsboys and Bootblacks' Home 

1418 Wabash avenue. 
Norwegian Lutheran Children's Home 

Fifty-eighth avenue and Irving Park boule- 
vard. 
St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

Thirty-fifth stre'et and Lake avenue. 
St. Joseph's Providence Orphan Asylum 

North Fortieth and Belmont avenues. 
St. Mary's Home for Children 

1251-1253 Jackson boulevard. 
St. Vincent's Infant Asylum 

191 La Salle avenue. 
St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum 

Hamlin and Scherbert avenues. 
IThlich Evangelical Orphan Asylum 

Center and Burling streets. 
William Raymond Champlin Memorial Home 

511-517 West Adams street. 
Workers' Creche 

3007 Butler street. 
Danville: 

St. Anthony's Home 

Green street. 
Vermilion County Children's Home .- 

Logan avenue and Williams street. 
Dover:' 

Dover Deacone.ss Home 

Elgin: 

Larkin Children's Home 

320 South State street. 
Ewing: 

Hudelson Home 

Feehanville: 

St. Mary's Training School 

(Des Plaines.) 
Flanagan: 

Salem Orphanage 

Freeport: 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home 

South Walnut and Grant streets. 
Glenwood: 

Illinois Manual Training School Farm 

Harvey: 

Amanda Smith Industrial Orphan Home 

305 East One hundred and forty-seventh street. 
Hoyleton: 

Evangelical Orphans' Home 

Joliet: 

Guardian Angel Home 

117 Buell avenue. 
Swedi-sh Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home and 
Industrial School. 

Rowell avenue. 
Lake Bluff: 

Methodist Deaconess Orphanage and Epworth Chil- 
dren's Home. 
Lake Villa: 

Allendale Farm 

Lincoln: 

Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home of Illinois 



Private corporation 

As.sociated Jewish Charities of Chicago 

Hull House 

JIasonic Grand Lodge of Illinois 

Juvenile Court Committee 

Private association 

Marie Methodist Episcopal Chapel 

Metropolitan Church Association 

Catholic Bishops of Chicago 

Newsboys and Bootblacks' Association 

Norwegian Lutheran Children's Home 
Society. 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Episcopal Sisters of St. Mary 

Sisters of Charity ' 

Sisters of Third Order of St. Francis . . 

St. Paul's Evangelical Church 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Private association 

Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart 

Private corporation , 

American Congregational Deaconess 
Association. 

Elgin Children's Home Association 

Baptist churches 

Brothers of the Christian Schools , 

Defenceless Mennonite Church 

St. Joseph's Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Southern Illinois District of Evangel- 
ical Synod of North America. 

Sisters of St. Francis . 

Illinois Conference of Augustana Synod. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Allendale Association 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows 

Included in St. Elizabeth's Hospital. 



Care of destitute crippled children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care and education of children of de- 
ceased Masons. 

Care of delinquent and dependent 
children. 

Care of children of working mothers.. 

Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of orphan and needy children... 

Care of working boys, newsboys, and 
waifs. 

To provide a transient home for home- 
less boys. 

Care of poor and helpless children 

Care of orphan and destitute girls 

Care of orphan and destitute boys 

Care and training of homeless girls... 

Care of foundlings and other destitute 
children. 

Care of orphan and dependent chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of homeless boys 

Care of children of working mothers . 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute and dependent chil- 
dren. 

Temporary care of neglected and or- 
phan children. 

Care of destitute, orphan, and aban- 
doned children. 

Care of orphan and needy children 

Care of dependent boys 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of orphans 

Care of dependent boys 

Care of colored orphan, half orphan, 
and friendless children. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and aban- 
doned children. 

Care of homeless and destitute children 
Care of orphan and friendless children. 

Care of destitute and orplian children . 



ceased Odd Fellows. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



67 



_ NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 

sub.sidy 

from public 

funds. 


Income 

inmates, 
1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




Oe 


January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 

1 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




40 


20 


20 


61 


27 


34 


39 


12 


27 


10 


SO 


*0 


S5, 000 


169 


68 


35 


33 


160 


91 


69 


95 


49 


46 


' 








9,696 


170 


50 


28 


22 








50 


28 


99 


3 
12 






300 



1, .500 
9,908 


171 
172 


83 


39 


44 


12 


7 


5 


82 


41 


41 


35 

41 


33 
20 


2 
21 


2,406 


2,189 


217 


12 
30 


11 
15 


1 
15 


9 
6 





1,090 


4,500 
5,145 


173 


■0 


174 








11 


6 


5 








9 


6 


3 

16 









327 



1,200 


175 


25 


9 


16 


7 


4 


3 


25 


9 


35 


35 





30 


30 





25 


25 





6 








8,000 


177 


41 


41 





507 


507 





41 


41 





6 





1,184 


5,696 


178 


68 


40 


28 


28 


16 


12 


72 


42 


30 


8 





1,491 


6, 429 


179 


200 





200 


143 





143 


190 





190 


6 





4,250 


11,295 


180 


240 


240 





140. 


140 





245 


245 





4 





4,434 


12,988 


181 


71 





71 


77 





77 


90 





90 


6 





4,119 


6,347 


182 


259 


156 


103 


691 


367 


324 


222 


123 


99 


30 


12,000 


6,847 


20, 308 


183 


71 


45 


26 


49 


26 


23 


86 


49 


37 








506 


5,350 


184 


83 


39 


44 


43 


19 


24 


88 


35 


53 


12 





2,066 


8,216 


185 


64 


04 





72 


72 





85 


85 





12 





5,000 


11, .500 


186 


22 


12 


10 








17 


9 




2 






319 

0) 


1, 332 

0) 


187 


36 


16 


20 


33 


20 


13 


35 


18 


17 


1 


35 


20 


15 


32 


18 


14 


18 


12 


6 


3 


1,074 


900 


1,500 


189 


5 


1 


4 


14 


4 


10 




1 


5 


1 





120 


270 


190 


17 


14 


3 


10 


5 


5 


12 


11 


1 


2 





568 


1,033 


191 


2 


2 





24 


14 


10 


14 


11 


3 








12 


60 


192 


274 


274 





325 


325 





369 


369 





27 


13,000 





26, 000 


193 


27 


16 


11 


22 


11 


11 


41 


24 


17 


1 


(=) 


523 


795 


194 


45 


23 


22 


63 


30 


33 


45 


23 


22 


1 





450 


800 


195 


319 


319 





292 


292 





344 


344 





35 


13, 000 





45, 535 


196 


38 


' 26 


12 


26 


19 


7 


19 


8 


11 


5 





. 328 


2,727 


197 


33 


18 


15 


29 


13 


16 


60 


31 


29 


6 





270 


2,226 


198 


66 


27 


39 


18 


6 


12 


72 


25 


" 





696 


1,655 


4,543 


199 


73 


40 


33 


22 


15 


7 


89 


49 


40 


' 


432 


1,350 


5,718 


200 


104 


50 


54 


59 


29 


30 


116 


55 


61 


3 





2,335 


9,017 


201 


50 


50 





10 


10 





50 


50 





3 





1,164 


6,000 


202 


135 


70 


65 


24 


12 


12 


136 


82 


54 


21 








21, 246 


203 



68 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



S'AME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
ciiildren 
received. 



ILLINOIS— Continued. 
Lisle: 

St. Joseph's Bohemian Orphanage 

May wood: 

Central Baptist Orphanage 

Metamora: 

Diocesan Orphan Asylum 

Morrison: 

Mt. Carmel Orphanage 

Nachusa: 

Nachusa Lutheran Orphanage 

Normal: 

Illinois Soldiers' Orphans' Home 

Onarga: 

Bethel Home 

Paris: 

Edgar County Children's Home 

Peoria: 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home 

211 Malone avenue. 

State Industrial School for Girls 

1503 North Madison avenue. 
Quincy: 

St. Aloysius Orphans' Home 

Twentieth and Vine streets. 
Woodland Home for Orphans and Friendless 
2707 Main street. 
Rantoul: 

Rantoul Children's Home 

Rock Island: 

Bethany Protective Association 

Shelbyville: 

Middlesworth Home 

Springfield: 

Orphanage of the Holv Child 

220 East Adams street. 
Urbana: 

Cunningham Deaconess Orphanage 

Whitehall: 

Whiteha',1 Orphans' Home 

Woodstock: 

Chicago Industrial Home for Children 

INDIAN TERRITORY. 
Atoka: 

Murro w Indian Orphan Asylum 

Krebs: 

St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum for Girls 

Tahlequah: 

Cherokee Orphan A.sylum 

INDIANA. 
Anderson: 

Madison County Orphans' Home 

Bluffton: 

WeUs County Orphans' Home 

Boonville: 

Warrick County Orphans' Home 

Brookville: 

Franklin County Children's Home 

Columbus: 

Frances Comfort Thomas Orphans' Home 

Crawfordsville: 

Montgomery County Orphans' Home 

Evansville: 

Vanderburg County Orphans' Home 

Fort Wayne: 

Allen County Orphans' Home 

Fort Wayne Orphan Home 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home 

Wells street and Archer 
Franklin: 

Johnson County Orphans' Home 
Greencastle: 

Putnam County Orphans' Home. 



Sisters of St. Benedict 

Baptist churches of Chicago 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Illinois Synod of the Evangelical Luth- 
eran Church. 

State of Illinois 

Western Seamen's Friend Society 

Private corporation 

Evangelical Lutheran Children's 

Friend Society. 
Private corporation 

St. Aloysius Orphan Society 

Private corporation : 

Illinois Children's Home and Aid So- 
ciety. 

Private association , 

Illinois Children's Home and Aid So- 
ciety. 

Episcopal Church 

Woman's Home Missionary Society of 
the Methodist Episcopal Church.' 

Whitehall Orphan Home Society 

Free Methodist Church , 

Private corporation , 

Sisters of Mercy 

Cherokee nation 

Children's Home Association 

Wells county 

Warrick county 

Franklin county 

Bartholomew county 

Montgomery county 

Vanderburg county 

Allen county 

Reformed Church 

Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ 

Johnson county 

Putnam county 

1 Opened May 12, 1904. 



Care of homeless children of Bohemian 
parentage. 

Care of dependent and neglected chil- 
dren. 

Care of homeless and dependent chil- 
dren. 

Care of homeless children 

Care and education of orphans 

Care and education of soldiers' orphans. 

Care of children of defective classes ... 

Care of dependent children 

Temporary care of dependent, neg- 
lected, and delinquent children. 
To train dependent girls 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphan and friendless children 
under 10 years. 

Care of dependent and homeless chil- 
dren. 

Care of dependent, neglected, and de- 
linquent children. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan and half orphan girls . . 

To provide a temporary home for or- 
phans. 

Care and education of orphan and 
homeless children. 

Care of homeless and neglected children 



Care of full blood Indian orphans 

Care of orphan girls 

Care and education of Indian orphans 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphans 

Care of orphans 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan and destitute children. 

Care of orphan children 

Care of orphan and dependent children 

Care of orphans 

Care of orphans 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of orphans 

Care of orphans 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 



Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 

Both. 
Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESERIES— Continued. 



69 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



1,000 



3,180 

188 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



S340 
1,854 



1,015 
3,000 



1,499 

575 

4,500 

2, 500 

7,010 

6,305 
8,631 
3,394 

2.157 



70 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 1.— OKPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



INDIANA— Continued. 
Greensburg: 

Decatur County Orphans' Home 

Hadley: 

Hadley Industrial School for Girls 

Indianapolis: 

German Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home 

3310 East Washington street. 
German General Protestant Orphan Home 

State avenue and Nebraska street. 
Guardians' Home 

(Irvington.) 
Home for Friendless Colored Children 

319 West Twenty-first street. 
Indianapolis Day Nursery 

518 West Vermont street. 
Indianapolis Orphan Asylum 

College avenue and Thirteenth street. 

Pentecost Band Faith Orphanage 

St. Joseph's Industrial School 

72.5 South Alabama street. 
Jeffersonville: 

Jeffer.sonville Orphans' Home 

Knightstown: 

Indiana Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans' Home 

Knightsville: 

Clay County Orphans' Home 

Lafayette: 

St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum and Manual Labor School 
Tippecanoe County Orphans' Home 

Lagrange: 

Rogers Orphans' Home 

Lebanon: 

Boone County Orphans' Home 

Logansport: 

Cass County Orphans' Home 

Madison: 

Jefferson County Children's Home 

Marion: 

Grant County Orphans' Home , 

Mishawaka: 

Mishawaka Orphans' Home 

Monticello: 

White County Orphans' Home 

Muncie: 

Delaware County Children's Home 

Minnetrisita boulevard. 
New Albany: 

Cornelia Memorial Orphan Home 

1801 Ekin avenue. 
Patoka: 

French Orphans' Home 

Petersburg: 

. Thornton Orphans' Home 

Plymouth: 

Julia E. Work Training School 

Richmond: 

Wernle Orphans' Home 

Rockport: 

Veatch Orphans' Home 

Shelby ville: 

Gordon Children's Home 

Terre Haute: 

Rose Orphan Home 

Twenty-fifth street and Wabash avenue. 
St. Ann's Providence Orphan Asylum 

North Thirteenth street and Fifth avenue. 
Terre Haute Day Nursery 

408 North Fourth street. 
Vigo County Home for Dependent Children 

Treaty: 

White's Indiana Manual Labor Institute 

Vincennes: 

Knox County Orphan Asylum 

St. Vincent's Male Orphan Asylum 

Washington: 

Daviess County Orphans' Home 



Decatur county 

Indiana Woman's Christian Temper- 
ance Union. 

German Evangelical Lutheran Or- 
phans' Home Society. 

German General Protestant Orphan 
Association. 

MaJrion county 

Friends Church 

Day Nursery Association 

Private corporation 

Pentecost Bands 

Sisters of Providence 

Jeffer.sonville Orphans' Home Society. 

State of Indiana 

Clay county 

Catholic Diocese of Fort Wayne 

Private corporation 

Lagrange county 

Boone county 

Private corporation 

Jefferson county 

Grant county ; 

Children's Aid Society of Indiana 

White county 

Delaware county 

Private corporation 

Gibson county 

Pike county 

Private corporation 

Evangelical Luth eran Church 

Spencer county 

Shelby county 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Providence 

Private corporation 

Vigo county 

Society of Friends 

Knox county 

Catholic Diocese of Indianapolis 

Daviess county 

1 Not reported. 



Care of dependent chQdren 

Care of dependent girls 

Care and training of orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of homeless and neglected chil- 
dren. 

Care of friendless and neglected col- 
ored children. 
Care of children of working mothers - 

Care of dependent and orphan children 

Care of orphans 

Care of dependent and homeless girls. 

Care of poor children , 

Care of orphans of soldiers and sailors. 

Care of orphan and dependent children 

Care of orphan and dependent boys . . 
Care of orphan and other needy chil- 
dren. 

Care of poor children 

Care of orphan and poor children 

Care of dependent children , 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan and dependent children 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of dependent children 

Care of indigent orphan children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of dependent children 

Care and training of dependent and 
delinquent children. 

Care of homeless orphan children 

Care of orphan, neglected, and aban- 
doned children. 

Care of orphan and half orphan chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan and half orphan chil- 
dren. 
Care of orphan girls 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of dependent children 

Care of dependent and incorrigible 
children. 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphan boys 

Care of orphan and indigent children. 



Both. 
Girls. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Girls. 



Boys. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
:Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Boys. 



. ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



71 



NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 



On .Tanuary 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



80 


81,625 


238 


170 


2,200 


239 


138 


2,674 


240 


544 


6,134 


241 





8,444 


242 





8,000 


243 




715 


244 


587 


13,776 


245 


85 


12,000 


246 





1,200 


247 





1,971 


248 





100, 000 


249 





900 


250 


950 


6,500 


251 


575 


1,756 


252 





1,482 


253 





1,000 


254 


150 


2,200 


255 


68 


2,161 


256 





9,168 


257 


167 


6,750 


258 





97 


259 


242 


4,007 


260 





2,492 


261 





3,000 


262 




2,336 


263 


128 


17,000 


264 


215 


6,000 


265 



3,750 
IS, 355 

3,500 
437 

3,000 
10, 116 

3,135 



72 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Specific object of institution. 


Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 




INDIANA— Continued. 
Westfield: 


Indiana Children's Home Society 


To provide for homeless, neglected, and 
destitute children. 

Care of orphan and indigent children.. 

Care of destitute and other needy chil- 
dren. 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of children of destitute or invalid 
soldiers. 


Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 

Girls.... 
Both.... 

Boys 

Both.... 


1890 
1901 

1863 
1896 

18S8 
1896 
1879 
1892 
1901 
1894 
1881 
1892 
1863 

1887 
1880 
1899 
1898 

1889 

1903 
1893 
1901 

1889 
1863 

1899 

1899 
1888 

1858 
1870 


277 


Winchester: 


278 


IOWA. 
Belolt: 

United Norwegian Lutheran Church Orphans' Home. 

Council Bluffs: 


United Norwegian Lutheran Church . . 




'Ninth avenue and Third street. 
Davenport: 








Sisters of tlie Holy Humility of Mary . . 


282 


DBS Moines: 

Des Moines Home for Friendless Children 


Care (?f needy children 




2018 High street. 




Care of homeless and destitute chil- 
dren. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan and destitute children. . 

Care of orphans and half orphans of 
Danish parentage.. 

Care of orphan and homeless children. . 
Care of dependent children 




2340 East Ninth street. 


Roadside Settlement House Associa- 




720 Mulberry street. 
Dubuque: 


986 


Elkhorn: 


United Danish Evangelical Lutheran 
Church. 

Evangelical Lutheran Home Finding 
Society. 


''87 


Fort Dodge: _ 


288 


Sioux City: 


290 


West Second and Kansas streets. 
Stanton: 

Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home 

Tabor: 


Evangelical Lutheran Augustana 
Synod. 

Hephzibah Faith Missionarv Associa- 
tion. 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphan Society . 


Care of orphan and friendless children. 

Care of homeless and friendless chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of dependent and abandoned 
children. 

Care of orphan children. , 


291 


Waverlv: 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home 




KANSAS. 
Atchison: 


293 


Clebtirne: 

Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Orphan Home 

Fort Scott: 


Kan.sas Conference of the Swedish 
Lutheran Augustana Synod. 






095 


105-107 Blair avenue. 


Sisters of Mercy 


Care of Catholic orphans 




Eighth and Burke streets. 
HlUsboro: 

Industrial School and Hvgiene Home for the Friend- 
less, 
lola: 




Industrial training of needy and home- 
less children. 

Care of neglected and orphan children. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of homeless colored children 

Care of orphan and de.stitute children . 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of orphan, homeless, and desti- 
tute children. 

Care and training of orphan girls 

Care of friendless and homeless chil- 
dren. 


297 
298 
299 

300 

301 

302 

303 

304 
305 

306 
307 


Private corporation 


Kansas City: 




Eighth street and State avenue. 




906 Washington avenue. 
Leavenworth: 




De Soto road. 




Topeka: 


Private corporation . . . 


Third and Fillmore streets. 
Wichita: 


Private association 


1447 River street. 


Sisters of St Joseph . 






3800 East First street. 

KENTUCKY. 
Bardstown: 




Coldspring: 
1 St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 


Sisters of Notre Dame 


Care of orphan and destitute children. . 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 73 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 









NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 






























Number 


Amount of 
annual 


Income 


Total cost 




















On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. . 


Kemaining December 31, 1904. 


of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


subsidy 

from public 

funds. 


from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 
























Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 












46 


38 


8 


83 


50 


33 


51 


37 


14 


7 


S4,.581 


$0 


$3, 961 


276 


18 


16 


2 


3 


' 





18' 


16 


2 


4 


1,969 





4,789 


277 


124 


69 


55 


18 


10 


8 


132 


76 


56 


8 





296 


8,208 


278 


30 


10 


- 20 








23 


15 


g 


4 


126 


• 1,231 


2,400 


279 


487 
101 


299 
56 


188' 
45 


115 
45 


75 
25 


40 
20 


491 
111 


298 
61 


50 


69 

1 





1,600 


62,923 
2,000 









281 


42 


18 


24 


88 


43 


45 


48 


25 


23 


7 





1,984 


3,825 


282 


20 


13 


7 


250 


132 


118 


32 


23 


9 


20 








20, 020 


283 


10 


6 


4 








13 


6 


7 


1 





40 


300 


284 


262 


^ 147 


115 


71 


36 


35 


195 


101 


94 


4 


2,500 


2,487 


7,948 


285 


21 


10 


11 











19 


10 


9 


3 





12 


2,019 


286 


5 


3 


2 


23 


12 


11 


3 


3 





4 








2,876 


287 


28 


15- 


13 


22 


10 


12 


8 


6 


2 


2 





493 


2,594 


288 


35 


23 


12 


7 


4 


3 


37 


23 


14 


3 








4,113 


289 


9 


4 


5 


4 


2 


2' 


9 


4 


5 











357 


290 


80 


40 


40 


18 


7 


11 


77 


38 


39 


8 





300 


6,317 


291 


160 


120 


40 


58 


41 


17 


147 


108 


39 


42 







18,000 


292 


28 


15 


13 


2 









15 


13 




200 


40 


2,147 


293 


29 


12 


17 


156 


86 


70 


34 


19 


15 




200 


450 


1,240 


294 


19 


18 


1 


6 


6 





18 


18 











300 


1,080 


295 


56 


■ 32 


24 


6 


4 


2 


41 


29 


12 





700 


250 


2,661 


296 


14 


6 


8 


42 


18 


24 


23 


9 


14 


2 





160 


800 


297 


48 


28 


20 


84 


44 


40 


45 


24 


21 


5 


500 


945 


2,350 


298 


11 


4 


7 


20 


9 


11 


7 


5 


2 


2 





120 


675 


299 


53 


50 


3 


17 


8 


9 


56 


46 


10 


2 


200 


150 


3,000 


300 


85 


39 


46 


36 


20 


16 


85 


39 


46 


2 


2,300 





5,600 


301 


15 


10 


5 


70 


40 


30 


22 


12 


10 


5 


800 


240 


2,000 


302 


5 


2 


. 3 


17 


11 


6 


6 


3 


3 


1 


230 


72 


300 


303 


29 





29 


15 





15 


25 





25 


4 


820 


124 


1,275 


304 


44 


15 


29 


335 


138 


197 


30 


13 


17 


5 


1,000 


800 


2,629 


305 


87 


87 





118 


118 





87 


87 





1 








3,000 


306 


1 97 


64 


33 


22 


11 


11 


103 


59 


44 


14 





1,281 


4,100 


307 



74 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Specific object of institution. 


Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 




KENTU-CKY— Continued. 
Covington: 




Care of orphan and destitute children. . 
Care of orphan and destitute children . . 
Care and education of white orphans . . 


Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Boys 

Boys 

Girls.'... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both 

Girls.... 
Both.... 

Girls.... 

Girls.... 
Girls.... 

Both.... 

Boys 

Girls.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both.... 


1882 
1858 
1898 

1896 
1878 
1878 

1852 
1875 
1869 
1855 
1871 

1849 

1849 
1884 

1875 

1852 
1868 

1902 
1824 
1859 
1902 
1881 
' 0) 
1866 
1851 




Fourteenth street and Madison avenue. 




vo 


Frankfort: 

Mary K Williams Home for Orphans 


Protestant Episcopal Church of the 
Ascension. 


^11 


Lexington: 




Fifth and Upper streets. 








461 West Third street. 
Leitchfield: 








Louisville: 


Kentucky Children's Home Society.... 
Private corporation 


Care of destitute children under 10 

years. 
Care and education of orphans of the 

Christian Church. 
Care and training of colored orphans . . 


"15 


2112 Von Borries avenue. 

Christian Church Widows and Orphans' Home 

809 West Jefferson street. 








Eighteenth and Dumisnil streets. 


German Baptist churches of North 

America. 
German Protestant Orphan Home 

Society. 


'IS 


1343 East Broadway. 






2220 Baxter avenue. 


Care of orphans and children of indi- 
gent parents. 
Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of orphan and indigent children.. 


^•'0 


106 West Broadway. 
Louisville Baptist Orphans' Home 


Baptist churches of Kentuckv 


301 


1330 First street. 


Louisville Presbyterian Orphans' Home 
Society. 

Louisville and Kentucky Conferences 
of Methodist Episcopal Church , South. 

Society for the Protection of News- 
boys and Waifs. 

Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Ken- 
, tucky. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 




1714 Preston street. 


T^'^ 


906 Fifth street. 


To provide a home for newsboys and 
waifs. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute boys. 

Care of orphan and destitute girls 




532 Third avenue. 


^■^"i 


1124 Morton avenue. 
Protestant Episcopal Orphan Asylum 




211 East College street. 


Ursuline Sisters 


J07 


Crescent Hill. 


Sisters of the Good Shepherd 


Care of colored girls between 3 and 16 

years. 
Care of orphan children 


?'''S 


800 West Walnut street. 
St Vincent's Orphan A.sylum for Girls 


Catholic Diocese of 'Louisville 




2372 Payne street. 
Midway: 




Care and edu'cation of orphan girls 
over 14 years. 


^W 


Newport: 

Campbell County Protestant Children's Home 

Clifton Heights. 
Versailles: 


Campbell Coun tv Protestan t Child ren ' s 
Home Society. 








LOUISIANA. 
Baton Rouge: 

Female Orphans' Home 

1219 Main street. 










Care and training of orphan girls 


n-l 


Fifth and Florida streets. 
Lake Charles: 


Baptist Church 




New Orleans: 




Care of destitute orphan boys 

Care of orphan and destitute girls 

Care of needy and homeless colored 
children. 


Sfi 


5220 St. Charles avenue. 
Children's Home of the Protestant Episcopal Church. 

609 Jackson avenue. 
Colored Industrial Home and School 

Gentilly avenue. 
Evangelical Lutheran Bethlehem Orphan Asylum.... 

5413 North Peters street. 


Protestant Episcopal Church 


•^7 


Private corporation 




Evangelical Lutheran Church, South .. 

Louisiaua Freedmen's Bapti.st Associa- 
tion. 

German Protestant Orphan Asylum 
A.ssociation. 

Sisters Marianites of the Holy Cross. . . . 

Sisters of the Perpetual Adoration 


•"1 


Care of orphans 


If) 


7435 Mississippi street. 


Care of orphans of German descent .... 

Care and industrial training of orphans. 

To support and instruct children of 
working mothers. 


41 


920 State street. 

Immaculate Conception Girls' Asylum 

Rampart and Elmira streets. 




•2325 Marais street. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



75 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 

annual 

.subsidy 

from public 



, Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



83, 665 
2,500 



1,200 


313 


14,500 


314 


0) 


315 


1,000 


316 


2,578 


317 


6,255 


318 


3,275 


319 


10,000 


320 


2,636 


321 


5,400 


322 



325 
6,500 j326 
2,456 '327 
2, 594 ' 328 

18,000 
2,506 



6,500 

2,000 

I 
1, 500 I 334 

7, 000 ! 335 

i 
4, 281 j 336 

2,090 

4,520 

375 

6,397 

6, 720 

1,960 342 



76 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


Both.... 


1855 


Both.... 


1892 


Girls.... 


1869 


Girls.... 


1849 


Girls.... 


1817 


Both.... 


1853 


Girls.... 


1894 


Both.... 


1878 


Girls.... 


1845 


Both.... 


1853 


Boys.... 


1835 


Boys.... 


1878 


Both.... 


1858 


Girls.... 


1729 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1839 


Both.... 


1866 


Girls.... 


1895 


Both 


1899 


Both.... 


1889 


Boys.... 


1893 


Both.... 


1828 


Boys.... 


1893 


Both.... 


1873 


Girls.... 


1828 


Boys 


1899 


Girls.... 


1890 


Both.... 


1888 


Boys 


1840 


Both.... 


1778 


Boys 


1867 


Both.... 


1883 


Girls.... 


1840 



LOUISIANA— Continued. 

Nevf Orleans— Continued. 

Jewish Orphans' Home 

5342 St. Charles avenue. 



Louisiana Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 
Children. 

2331 Constance street. 



Poydras Asylum 

5354 Magazine street. 
Protestant Orphans' Home 

Seventh and Magazine streets. 



St. Alphonsus Orphan Asylum 

Fourth and Saratoga streets. 
St. Elizabeth's Industrial School 

1314 Napoleon avenue. 
St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

Josephine and Laurel streets. 
St. Mary's Catholic Orphan Boys' Asylum. 

4111 Chartres street. 



Ursuline Orphanage 

North Peter street (Convent grounds). 



Bangor: 

Bangor Children's Home. 
Ohio street. 



Military and Naval Orphan Asylum . 



Lewiston: 

Healy Asylum 

81 Ash street. 
Portland: 

Female Orphan Asylum . 

62 State street. 
Maine Home for 



St. Elizabeth's Orphan Asylu 
87 High street. 



MARYLAND. 
Annapolis: 

Annapolis Female Orphan Asylum 

Market and Shipwright streets. 
.\nnapolis Junction: 

National Junior Republic 

Baltimore: 

All Saints' Training School for Girls 

Warwick avenue (Walbrook). 

Baltimore Day Nursery 

Patterson Park avenue and Gough street. 

Baltimore Manual Labor School 

(Arbutus.) 



Private association . 
Private corporation 



Sisters of Mt. Carmel . . . 

Sisters of Charity 

Female Orphan Society 



Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Notre Dame 

Sisters Marianites of the Holy Cross. 

Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of Charity -. 

Ursuline Sisters 



Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

State of Maine 

Children's Aid Society of Maine 

Protestant Episcopal Church of Maine . 

Private association 

Sisters of Charity 



Private corporation 
Private corporation 
Sisters of Mercy 



Private corporation 



Woman's League 

Protestant Episcopal Sisters of the Poor. 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Christ Protestant Episcopal Church 

1 Not reported. 



Care and education of orphans and hal f 

orphans. 
Care of children under 16 years 

Care of orphan and other needy girls . . 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and needy 

children. 
Care and education of orphan, half 

orphan, and destitute girls. 
Care and education of orphan and 

abandoned children. 
Care and training of needy girls 

Care and training of orphan children. . 

Care and education of destitute boys... 

Care of newsboys and working boys 

Care of infants, foundlings, and or- 
phans. 
Care and training of orphan girls 

Care of orphans and infants 

To rescue children from almshouses 
and criminal houses. 

Care of homeless children 

Care of orphans and half orphans of 
soldiers and sailors. 

Care of friendless girls 

Care of orphan and neglected children. 
Care of needy and imperiled children.. 
Care of orphan and destitute boys 

Care of liomeless children and orphan 
girls. 

Temporary care of homeless and desti- 
tute boys. 

Care of orphans 

Care of destitute girls 

To support and train incorrigible and 

dependent boys. 
Care and training of girls 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of indigent boys 

Care of destitute and neglected orphans 

and half orphans. 
Care of destitute boys 

Temporary care of neglected and des- 
titute children. 
Care of destitute female children 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



77 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31 , 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 








136 


62 


74 


23 


14 


9 


141 


69 


72 


19 


8500 


80 


828,000 


343 


19 


10 


9 


81 


44 


37 


7. 


' 


4 


5 


570 





3,919 


344 


57 





57 


24 





24 


55 





55 


3 


852 





4,118 


345 


130 





130 


194 





194 


134 





134 


6 


810 


104 


7,154 


346 


108 





108 


11 





11 


84 





84 


14 


250 





9,825 


347 


96 


28 


68 


25 


10 


15 


106 


35 


71 


8 


672 


287 


7,285 


348 


47 





47 


13 





13 


43 





43 











4,000 


349 


144 


65 


79 


40 


15 


25 


144 


65 


79 


3 


600 


15 


3,000 


350 


94 





94 


80 





80 


56 





56 


2 








5,692 


351 


130 


69 


61 


30 


21 


9 


128 


72 


56 


1 


792 


1,228 


3,074 


352 


300 


,300 





120 


120 





305 


305 





9 


3,876 


200 


9,500 


353 


53 


53 





(M 


0) 


(1) 


(>) 


(') 


(M 








0) 


0) 


3.54 


135 


61 


• 74 


255 


113 


142 


130 


47 


83 


15 


4,116 


2 4, 846 


= 10,334 


355 


40 





40 


40 





40 


40 





40 








(') 


(M 


356 


21 


10 


11 


6 


^ 


4 


0) 


(1) 


(') 


2 


1,200 





1,800 


357 


24 


12 


12 


31 


13 


18 


21 


8 


13 


8 


2,500 





' 3,251 


358 


19 


8 


11 


28 


12 


16 


30 


12 


18 


6 


1,000 


740 


4,714 


359 


62 


29 


33 


26 


14 


12 


65 


33 


32 


10 







8,483 


360 


15 





15 


13 





13 


13 





13 




1,250 


56 


2,500 


361 


20 


8 


12 


3 


2 


1 


14 


7 


7 


3 





75 


1,600 


362 


151 


113 


38 


36 


31 


5 


149 


114 


35 


22 








24,000 


363 


139 


139 





84 


84 





150 


150 





15 


2,000 


5,330 


9,434 


364 


44 


13 


31 


22 


6 


16 


42 


12 


30 


5 





425 


4, 552 


365 


19 


19 





37 


37 





19 


19 





3 


1, 2.50 


100 


2, 000 


366 


70 


7 


63 


130 


10 


120 


66 


6 


60 





1,150 


1,150 


3,475 


367 


3 





3 











3 





3 


1 








265 


368 


60 


60 





24 


24 





60 


60 





10 


1,000 





9,000 


369 


23 





23 


39 





39 


27 





27 


3 





625 


2,895 


370 


69 


36 


33 








90 


30 


60 


10 


1,500 


200 


2, 700 


371 


60 


60 





1 


1 







38 





9 


3,000 





6,000 


372 


115 


40 


75 


13 


7 


6 


85 


35 


50 


11 


1,000 


604 


7,715 


373 


78 


78 





38 


38 


' 


75 


75 





11 


2,000 


7,349 


13, 716 


374 


1 





1 


40 


23 


17 


1 


1 





3 








250 


375 


20 





20 











17 





17 


4 








2,400 


376 



2 Includes St. Joseph's Maternity Hospital, 



78 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



MARYLAND— Continued. 

Baltimore— Continued. 

Convent of Our Lady and St. Francis. 

2226 Maryland avenue. ■ 
Dolan Children's Aid Asylum 

1709 Gough street. 



General German Orphan Asvlum. 
224-242 Aisquith street. 

Hebrew Day Nursery 

1204 East Baltimore street. 



Johns Hopkins Colored Orphan Asylum 

Thirty-first street and Remington avenue. 
Kelso Home 

2810 St. Paul street. 



Maryland Baptist Orphanage and Home for Colored 
Children. 

McMechen and Etting streets. 



Northeastern Day Nursery 

■ 429 Aisquith street. 
Nursery and Child's Hospital of Baltimore City . 
Franklin and Schroeder streets. 



St. Anthony's German Orphan Asylum 

907 North Central avenue. 
St. 'Elizabeth's Home for Colored Children . 

_313-319 St. Paul street. 
St. John's Orphanage for Boys 

Fair Oak avenue (Waverley). 
St. Joseph's House of Industry 

Carey and Lexington streets. 



St. Vincent's Infant Asylum 

Division street and Lafayette avenue. 



Home for Friendless Children . 
Fort Washington: 

Hart Farm School 



Frederick: 

Loats' Orphan Asylum. 



Hagerstown: 

Washington County Home for Orphan and Friendless 
Children. 



MASSACHUSETTS. 



Boston: 

Boston A.sylum and Farm School for Indigent Boys. 
(Thompson's Island.) 



Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of the Holy Cross 

First Presbyterian Church 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Johns Hopkins Hospital 

Private corporation 

Henry Watson Children's Aid Society. 
Baptist Church 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Holy Cross 

Si.sters of Notre Dame 

Franciscan Sisters 

St. John's Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 

All Saints Sisters of the Poor 

Old St. Paul's Episcopal Church 

St. Peter's Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church . 
Private corporation 



Evangelical Lutheran Church . 
All Saints Episcopal Church. . . 



Private corporation 



Boston Female Asylum 

1008 Washington street. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

1 Not reported. 



Care of colored orphan girls 

Care of destitute children 

Care of orphan and half orphan girls 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of destitute orphans and half 

orphans. 
Care of homeless and vagrant children. 

Care of colored female orphans 

Care of destitute female orphans of 

Methodist parentage. 
Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan, destitute, and aban- 
doned colored children. 

Care of colored orphan children 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of children under 4 years 

Care of orphans between 7 and 15 years. 

Care of orphan and destitute children . . 

Care of colored children, infants, and 

foundlings. 
Care of destitute orphan boys 

Care and training of orphan girls 

Care of orphan and destitute girls 

Care of destitute colored children 

Care and training of poor girls 

Care and training of destitute female 

children. 
Care of orphan and half orphan boys.. 

Care of orphan and abandoned chil- 
dren. 
Care and training of orphan girls 

To educate poor boys 

Care and training of needy girls 

Care of dependent children of the Dis- 
trict of Columbia. 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of destitute female orphans 

Care of orphan and destitute childrsn . . 



Care of boys between 7 and 14 years . . 
Training of orphan and indigent boys 

Care of needy children 

Care of indigent girls 



Girls. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both 
Both 
Boys 
Girls 
Girls 
Boys 
Girls 
Girls 
Boys 
Both 
Girls 

Boys 
Girls 
Both 

Girls, 
Girls, 

Both, 



Boys. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Girls. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



79 







NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 
































Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, :904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 




27 





27 


5 





5 


27 





27 


1 


90 


SO 


82, 494 


377 


34 


18 


16 


10 


6 


4 


34 


18 


16 


1 








2,000 


378 


33 





33 


3 





3 


30 





30 


8 








5,500 


379 


160 


77 


83 


15 


7 


8 


156 


71 


85 


9 


2,500 





11,786 


380 


100 


37 


63 








49 


21 


28 


7 





57 


2,600 
12,000 


381 


77 


46 


31 


14 


7 


7 


.74 


41 


38 


12 


2,500 





382 


196 


50 


146 


58 


24 


34 


110 


62 


48 


20 


5,000 


800 


12, 000 


383 


65 





65 


6 





6 


59 





59 


9 








10,733 


384 


37 





37 


10 





10 


40 





40 


7 





60 


5,200 


38& 


8 


5 


3 


110 


61 


49 


7 


2 


5 


8 








7,394 


386 


15 


5 


10 


15 


6 


9 


20 


7 


13 


2 





120 


1,200 


387 


40 


30 


10 


6 


5 


1 


36 


26 


10 


2 


1,630 





1,873 


388 


27 


12 


■ 15 








97 


0) 

55 


0) 

42 


4 


500 


400 


720 


389 


103 


59 


44 


119 


73 


46 


22 


- 5,473 


900 


9,643 


390 


19 


19 





1 


1 





20 


20 





3 








1,562 


391 


90 


50 


40 


28 


15 


13 


91 


51 


40 


6 





896 


4,123 


392 


139 


30 


109 


137 


64 


73 


143 


38 


105 


1 


5,100 


391 


11, 000 


393 


11 


11 





4 


■ 4 





11 


11 











139 


1,132 


394 


60 





60 


15 





15 


63 





63 


8 


3,000 





16,000 


395 


203 





203 


59 





59 


205 





205 


5 


13,900 


1,100 


20, 325 


396 


28 


28 





5 


5 





27 


27 





5 


1,345 


285 


2, 120 


397 


45 





45 


4 





4 


41 





41 


6 








6,000 


398 


21 





21 





' 





18 





18 


2 








2,000 


399 


61 


61 





22 


22 





68 


68 





2 


2,100 





6,000 


400 


240 


-140 


100 


356 


213 


143 


230 


128 


102 


36 


11,000 


3,700 


15„686 


401 


60 





60 


13 





13 


60 





60 


7 








P) 


402 


44 


44 





4 


4 





46 


46 





9 








5,940 


403 


18 





18 


2 





2 


20 





20 


2 


2,000 





1,856 


404 


60 


60 




- 


84 


84 





77 


77 





15 


12,000 





18,000 


405 


8 







7 





7 


15 





15 


2 








1,600 


406 


9 





^ 











9 





9 


2 








1,800 


407 


35 


23 


12 


32 


18 


14 


25 


19 


6 


6 


1,500 





2,829 


408 


40 


40 





3 


3 





41 


41 





6 








9,000 


409 


98 


98 





26 


26 





96 


96 





18 





2,285 


25, 236 


410 


114 


51 


63 


42 


25 


17 


106 


48 


58 


4 





5, 735 


16, 378 


411 


78 





78 


32 





32 


92 





92 


9 





24 


13,500 


412 



80 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1. -ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Speciflc object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


Both.... 


1878 


Both.... 


1849 


Both.... 


1855 


Both.... 


1878 


Both.... 


1847 


Both.... 


1899 


Both.... 


1864 


Boys.... 


1853 


Both.... 


1833 


GirLs.... 


1853 


Boys.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1871 


Both.... 


1867 


Both.... 


1868 


Both.... 


1874 


Both.... 


1865 


Both.... 


1837 


Both.... 


1878 


Both.... 


1874 


Girls.... 


1832 


Both.... 


1887 


Both.... 


1884 


Both 


1878 


Both.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1883 


Both.... 


1896 


Boys.... 


1884 


Both.... 


1900 


Both.... 


1891 


Both.... 


1874 


Both.... 


1879 


Both.... 


1888 


Both.... 


1873 


Both.... 


1892 


Both.... 


1885 


Both.-.. 


1896 


Girls.... 


1900 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 

Boston — Continued. 

Children's House 

858 Albany street (Roxbury). 
Children's Mission to the Children of the Destitute . . 

277 Tremont street. 
Church Home for Orphan and Destitute Children 

North and Fourth streets (South Boston). 
Cottage Place Day Nursery 

1049 Columbus avenue i; Roxbury). 
Gwynne Temporary Home for Children 

46 Worcester street. 
Helping Hand Temporary Home 

Fortavenne and Beech Glen street (Roxbury). 
Home for Destitute Catholic Children 

788 Harrison avenue. 
House of the Angel Guardian 

85 Vernon Street (Roxbury). 
Hunt Asylum for Destitute Children 

46 Chestnut street (Charlestown). 
Industrial School for Girls 

232 Center street (Dorchester). 
Liversidge Institution of Industry 

291 River street (Mattapan). 
Martin Luther Orphan Home 

(West Roxbury.) 
Ma.ssachusetts Infant Asvlum 

106 Chestnut avenue (Jamaica Plain). 
Morgan Memorial Day Nursery 

Shawmut avenue and Corning street. 
Mt. Hope Home 

Bourne and Florence streets (Roslindale). 
New England Home for Little Wanderers 

202 West Newton street. 
Nickerson Home for Children 

14 Tyler street. 
Ruggles Street Day Nursery 

147 Ruggles street (Roxbury). 

St. Mary's Infant Asylum 

Jerome street and Gushing avenue (Dorches- 
ter). 
St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum 

Camden street. 
South End Day Nursery 

25 Dover street. 
Sunnyside Day Nursery 

41 Blossom street. 
Temporary Home 

43 Mt. Vernon street. 
Trinity House Day Nursery 

13 Burroughs place. 
Tyler Street Day Nurserv 

64 Tyler street. 
Union Day Nursery 

401 Shawmut avenue. 
Working Boys' Home 

38 Bennett street. 
Brockton: 

Brockton Day Nursery 

Brookline: 

Brookline Day Nursery 

Cambridge: 

Avon Home 

309 Mt. Auburn street. 
Moore Street Day Nursery 

79 Moore street. 
Chelsea: 

Chelsea Day Nursery and Children's Home 

148 Shawmut street. 
Fall River: 

Children's Home of Fall River 

427 Roberson street. 

St. Joseph's Orphans' Home 

56 Bassett street. 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home 

North Main street. 
Fitchburg: 

Fitchburg Union Aid Home for Children 

27 Holt street. 
Foxboro: 

St. Augustine's Children's Farm and Convalescent 
Home. 



Private corporation 

Unitarian churches 

Protestant Episcopal Church. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 



Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation , 

Lutheran congregati 

vicinity. 
Private corporation 



Boston Nortli End Mission , 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charitv , 



Sisters of Charity. . . 
Private corporation 
Private corporation 



Massachusetts Society for the Preven- 
tion of Cruelty to Children. 
Trinity Episcopal Church 



Private corporation 
Every Day Church . . 
Private corporation , 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Mercy 



Private corporation 

Society of St. John the Evangelist ... 
Includes St. Mov.''^' T ving-in Hospital. 



Care of children of working mothers . 

Care of orphan, friendless, and needy 

children. 
Care of minor children 

Care of children of working mothers . 

Temporary care of children 

Care of destitute and homeless Jewish 

children. 
Care of destitute Catholic children ... 

Care of orphan, destitute, and truant 

boys. 
Care of destitute children 

Care of girls between 10 and 15 years. . 

Training of poor boys 

Care and training of orphans 

Care of deserted and destitute children 

under 2 years. 
Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of destitute and homeless children 

Care of destitute and homeless children 

Care of needy children 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of foundlings and destitute chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of children of working women . . . 

Temporary care of neglected children 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of children of working mother.--. . 

Care of homeless boys 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of destitute children 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Temporary care of children of work- 
ing mothers. 

Care of orphan, abandoned, and desti- 
tute children. 

Care of orphan, destitute, and neg- 
lected children. 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

To assist needy children 

Care and training of young colored 
girls. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



81 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 

inmates, 
1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 








69 


25 


44 








56 


22 


34 




$0 


$0 


$6, 865 


413 


33 


20 


13 


179 


109 


70 


147 


84 


63 


12 





4,906 


20,856 


414 


74 


25 


49 


11 


6 


5 


74 


25 


49 


10 





481 


14, 157 


415 


52 


33 


19 








! 34 


20 


14 


4 








3,294 


416 


27 


9 


18 


214 


104 


110 


36 


21 


15 










7,479 


417 


61 


36 


25 


16 


12 


4 


64 


38 


26 


8 








8,500 


418 


212 


118 


94 


913 


509 


404 


204 


123 


81 


8 








19,000 


419 


277 


277 





342 


342 





300 


300 





7 


165 


12, 354 


42,071 


420 


13 


8 


5 


7 


4 


3 


14 


6 


8 


4 





187 


2,242 


421 


23 





23 


25 





25 


25 





25 


4 





486 


6,843 


422 


50 


50 





8 


8 





50 


50 





11 








13,000 


423 


52 


29 


23 


6 


2 


4 


52 


26 


26 


7 





30T 


5,380 


424 


70 


33 


37 


149 


72 


77 


55 


26 


29 


16 





5,633 


20, 271 


425 


6 


2 


4 








10 


8 


2 


2 





568 


1,114 


426 


35 


23- 




38 


21 


17 


28 


16 


12 


8 





1, 775 


6, 182 


427 


100 


62 


38 


310 


159 


151 


106 


63 


43 


32 








28, 654 


428 


40 


20 


20 


86 


53 


33 


28 


20 


8 


4 





1,330 


2,270 


429 


5? 


25 


28 








51 


21 


30 


g 








4,497 
120,000 


430 


130 


73 


57 


657 


336 


321 


99 


54 


45 


15 





15,088 


431 


182 





182 


99 





99 


160 





160 


4 





9,083 


13,743 


432 


41 


26 


15 








68 


34 


34 


8 





628 


4,804 


433 


31 


15 


16 








30 


16 


14 


4 





457 


434 
435 


15 


6 




114 


53 


61 


16 


10 


6 


4 








2,926 


22 


14 


„ 








44 


23 


21 


5 






215 
628 


2,775 
4,959 
1 200 


436 
437 
438 
439 


50 


(-) 


7 








77 


43 




5 


20 


13 








20 


13 


7 


2 





120 


150 


150 





257 


257 





164 


164 





24 





1,634 


36,000 


7 


2 


5 








g 


4 


2 






154 

219 


1,168 
2,328 
6,079 


440 
441 
442 


110 


63 


57 









43 


20 


23 


4 





34 




17 


12 


8 


4 


29 


17 


12 







310 


. 40 


21 


19 








33 


23 


10 


3 







2,900 


443 
444 


24 


18 




18 


5 


13 


25 


15 


10 


4 





1,950 


54 


28 


26 


34 


21 


13 


62 


35 


27 


7 





1,446 


5,337 


445 


350 


180 


170 


361 


200 


161 


361 


200 


161 


22 








16, 845 


446 


151 


74 


77 


86 


33 


53 


130 


70 


60 


6 





1,900 


7,000 


447 


7 


6 


1 


30 


14 


16 


16 


9 


7 


3 


' 


284 


970 


448 


12 





12 


152 





- 


12 





12 


3 


' 





1,600 


449 



30952—05- 



82 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Specific object of institution. 


Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


450 


MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 

Haverhill: 

Elizabeth Home 


Children's Aid Society 


Care of indigent and neglected chil- 
dren. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 
Care of orphan and destitute girls 

Care and education of destitute crip- 
pled children. 

Care of dependent girls between 2 and 

14 years. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan, abandoned, and needy 
children. 

Care of orphan and destitute children. . 

Temporary care of needy children 

Care of neglected, destitute, and or- 
phan children. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 
Care of orphan girls 


Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Girls.... 

Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both...- 
Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 
Girls.... 

Boys.... 
Both.... 

Boys.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 


1866 

(1) 

1893 
1881 

1894 
1875 
1902 
1868 

1902 
1902 

1889 
1877 

1875 
1875 
1900 

1842 

1880 
1903 
1872 
1839 

1893 

1897 
1876 
1891 
1849 

1843 
1893 
1886 


451 


149 Main street. 


Young Women's Business Association. . 


450 


64 Pecker street. 
Holyoke: 


453 






454 


(Ingleside.) 
Hvde Park: 
■ New England Peabody Home for Crippled Children .. 

Lawrence: 




455 


Ladies' Union Charitable Society 


456 


125 Methuen street. 




94 East Haverhill street. 




458 


189 Maple street. 
Longmeadow: 






Lowell: 




460 


60 Kirk street. 




461 


249 Westford street. 
Lowell Day Nursery 










Ill Appleton street. 






13 Anne street. 
Maiden: 




Care of children of working mothers. . . 
Care of orphan and incorrigible boys . . 
Care of children of working mothers . . 




21 Ferry street. 
Millbury: 




466 


New Bedford: 


Private corporation 


467 


16 Howard street and 191 County street. 




468 


Taber street. 
Newburyport: 


Church of the Immaculate Conception. 

Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary 
Society. 


Care of orphan and destitute children . 
Care of children of foreign missionaries. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 


469 


9 Court street. 
Newton: 




1136 Center street (Newton Center). 




1271 Center street. 

Rebecca Pomroy Newton Home for Orphan Girls 

24 Havey street. 
Salem: 






Salem Seamen's Orphan and Children's 
Friend Society. 






7 Carpenter street. 
Sharon: 




474 


Somerville: 

Washington Street Day Nursery 




Care of children of working mothers... 
Care of children of working mothers... 




144 Washington street. 
Springfield: 






78 Bliss street and 21 Pendleton avenue. 




477 


37 Buckingham street. 
Westfield: 

Shurtleff Mission to the Children of the Destitute 

Worcester: 


Private corporation 


Care of destitute and abandoned chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan, destitute, and neg- 
lected children. 
Care of orphans 






479 


46 High street. 


Sisters of Charity 


480 


Granite street. 
Worcester Children's Friend Society 




Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of orphan and Indian children . . . 
Care of orphan and homeless children. . 

Temporary care of homeless and desti- 
tute children. 


481 


821 Main street. 

MICHIGAN. 

Assinins: 


Sisters of St Joseph 


482 


Battle Creek: 






156 Hubbard street. 
Bay City: 






Columbus avenue and Johnson street. 





Not reported. 



■ ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



83 



NUMBER OF CHILDHEN. 



OnJanuary 1,1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 
Boy.s. 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 



10, 204 



361 
5, 427 



83, 141 
1,773 



19, 464 
10, 155 



1,562 
1,000 



3,771 


461 


4,010 


462 


2,000 


463 


1,567 


464 


3,500 


465 


3,097 


466 


8,150 


467 


1,323 


468 


4,497 


469 


945 


470 


2,486 


471 


5,500 


472 



15,596 
2,533 



84 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 1 . -ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
chOdren 
received 



Year 
when 
found- 



MICHIGAN— Continued. 



Bay City— Continued. 

Children's Home 

1203 Tenth street. 



■ Beulah Land Farm for Boys I Beulah Land Farm Association . 



Detroit: 

Felician Sisters' Orphanage 

St. Aubin and Canfleld avenues. 



Home of the Friendless 

33 Warren street, west. 
House of Providence Infant Asylum. 
187 Elizabeth street, east. 



St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum.. 
137 McDougall avenue. 



Grand Rapids: 

Children's Home 

662 Cherry street. 



East Leonard street. 



Kalamazoo: 

Dewing Children's Home 

South West and Ranney streets. 
Lansing: 

Rockv Beach Orphanage 

217 North Pine street. 
Monroe: 

St. Francis Orphans' Home 



St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 



Owosso: 

Dorcas Home 

800 North Hickory street. 
Saginaw: 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home 

Emerson and Howard streets. 
St. .foseph: 

Receiving Home 

1424 South State street. 



MINNESOTA. 
Duluth: 

Children's Home 

604 Fifteenth avenue, east. 

St. James Orphan Home 

Third street and Twentieth 
lona: 

Home of the Sacred Heart 

Lake Park: 
. Lake Park Orphans' Home 



Little Falls: 

St. Otto's Orphan Asylum. 
Second .street. 



Catholic Orphan Asylum 

Chicago avenue and Forty-sixth street. 



Unity House Day Nursery 

1616 Washington avenue, north. 
Washburn Memorial Orphan Asylum 

Nicolett avenue and Fiftieth street. 



Felician Sisters 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 
Sisters of Charity ... 
Private corporation 

Church of God 



To educate and care for homeless and 
neglected boys. 



Care of friendless children 

Care of children from birth to 7 years. 



Care and education of orphan children. 
Care of homeless boys 



Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 



Private corporation . . 
Sisters of St. Dominic 

Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 



Education of ministers' children and 
to provide a home for poor and help- 
less children. 



Care of homeless and destitute orphans. 



Care of destitute children under 12 



Care of homeless children 



Sisters of St. Joseph 

Sisters Servants of the Immaculate 
Heart of Mary. 



Private corporation .. 
Sisters of Charity.... 



Care of orphan boys. 
Care of orphan girls. 



Michigan Children's Home Society 



Care of homeless children 

Care and education of orphan children. 
Care of homeless children 



Duluth Home Society 
Benedictine Sisters. . . 



Care of dependent children. 
Care of orphan children 



Society of the Home of the Sacred Heart, 



Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate 
Conception. 



Plymouth Congregational Church 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Episcopal Diocese of Minnesota . . . 

Private association 

Private corporation 



Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 
Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of orphan boys 

Care of orphan and destitute children 
Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of needy children 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



State of Minnesota 

Included in Hou.se of Providence Maternity Hospital. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESERIES— Continued. 



85 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN, 



On Janviary 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December .31, 1904. 



ployees. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



624 


2,202 





35,000 


500 


9,000 


3,124 


8,937 


G) 


(1) 


3,726 


10, 258 


2,845 


10,000 





378 



3,^00 
4,595 

5,384 

1,634 

400 



419 510 

8, 000 I 511 

3,442 I 512 

400 513 

20,700 1514 



86 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



MINNESOTA— Continued. 
St. Paul: 

Day Nurserv 

141 East Ninth street. 
Jean Martin Brown Receiving Home 

2239 Commonwealth avenue (St. Anthony 
Park). 
Protestant Orphan Asylum 

670 Marshall avenue. 
St. Joseph's German Catholic Orphan Asylum 

Randolph street and Hamlin avenue. 
St. Paul's Catholic Orphan Asylum 

933 Carroll street. 
Vasa: 

Orphans' Home 

Wabasha: 

St. Elizabeth's Orphanage 

MISSISSIPPI. 
Columbus: 

Palmer Orphanage .'. 

Jackson: 

Mississippi Baptist Orphanage 

Natchez: 

D'Evereux Hall Orphan' Asylum 

Protestant Orphan Asylum 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum 

Jefferson and Rankin streets. 

Water Valley: 

Mississippi Orphans' Home 

MISSOURI. 
Camden Point: 

Female Orphan School 

Des Peres: 

German Lutheran Orphan Home 

Kansas City: 

Gillis Orphans' Home 

Twenty-second street and Tracey avenue. 
Kansas City Boys' Orphan Home 

922 Westport avenue. 
Kansas City Day Nursery 

413 Whittier place. 
Mattie Rhodes' Day Nursery 

1809 Forrest street. 
North End Day Nursery 

706 East Fifth street. 
St. Anthony's Home 

Twenty-third and College streets. 
St. Joseph's Female Orphan Asylum 

Thirty-first and Jefferson streets. 
Normandy: 

St. Frances Orphan Asylum 

St. Joseph : 

Day Nursery 

Second and Oak streets. 
Home for Little Wanderers 

Twenty-eighth and Calhoun streets. 
St. Louis: 

Baptist Orphans' Home 

1906 Lafayette avenue. 
Bethesda Foundling Home 

3651 Vista avenue. 
Christian Orphans' Home 

915 Aubert avenue. 
German General Protestant Orphans' Home 

4447 Natural Bridge road. 
German Protestant Orphans' Home 

St. Charles Rock road. 
German St. Vincent Orphan Asylum 

1421 Hogan street. 
Girls' Industrial Home and School 

5501 Von Versen avenue. 
House of the Guardian Angel 

1029 Marion street. 
Methodist Orphan.s' Home - 

4385 Maryland avenue. 
Mission Free School of the Church of the Messiah 

2737 Locust street. 



Private association 

Children's Home Society of Minnesota. 

Private corporation 

St. Joseph's German Catholic Orphan 

Society. 
Sisters of St. Joseph 

Evangelical Augustana Synod of North 
America. 

Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother 

Synod of the Presbyterian Churcli of 
Mississippi. 

Mississippi Baptist Convention 

Brothers of the Sacred Heart 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity ^. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South 

Christian Church of Missouri 

German Lutheran Hospital and Orphan 
Home Association. 

Private corporation 

Si-sters of Charity 

Private association , 

Private association 

Woman's Board of City Missions Meth- 
odist Episcopal Church, South. 
Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Oblate Sisters of Providence 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Missouri Baptist General Association... 

Private corporation 

Christian Church 

Private association 

German Evangelical Synod of North 

America. 
Sisteis of Christian Charity 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Methodist Episcopal churches. South, 

of St. Louis district. 
Unitarian Church of the Messiah 

1 Not reported. 



Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of homeless and neglected chil- 
dren. » 

To assist parents to keep their own 

children. 
Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of homeless girls and foundlings. 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphans 

Care of orphan children 

Care of destitute orphan children 

Care of orphan boys 

Care of orphan children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care and training of orphan children. 



Care and education of orphans and 
poor girls. 

Care and education of orphan children 

Care of orphan and dependent children 

Care and education of orphan boys . . . 

Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of abandoned infants 

Care of orphan girls and deserted chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan and half orphan girls . 

Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of homeless children L 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of foundlings 

Care of needy children 

Care of helpless orphan children 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphan and destitute children. 

Care of destitute girls 

Care of orphan and half orphan girls. . 

Care of destitute children 

Temporary care of orphan and desti- 
tute children. 



Both. 
Both. 



Boys. 
Both. 
Girls. 



Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 

Girls. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Girls. 



1865 
1898 



1878 
1858 
1850 
1854 
1859 
1867 
1841 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



87 









NUMBER OF CHILDEEN. 


































Number 


Amount of 
annual 
subj?idy 

from public 


Income 


Total cost 






















On 


January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 


of paid 
ployees. 


from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 








15 


g 


7 








20 


6 


14 


3 


$0 



S205 



$1,412 


5X6 


21 




12 


190 


101 




37 


22 


15 


13 


517 


38 


21 


17 


15 


8 


7 


30 


16 


14 


9 





1,200 


5,000 


518 


13C 


70 


66 


26 


14 


12 


138 


74 


64 


11 





2,242 


7,834 


519 


92 


'(') 


0) 


222 


{') 


(^) 


80 


0) 


0) 


2 








3,300 


520 


70 


39 


31 


15 


11 


4 


69 


39 


30 


8 








3,791 


•521 


43 


20 


23 


18 


7 


11 


52 


25 


27 











■ (') 


522 


41 


19 


22 


3 


1 


2 


44 


20 


24 


5 








3,600 


523 


80 


36 


44 


{') 


0) 


0) 


85 


34 


51 


6 








' 4,500 


524 


5.5 


55 





17 


17 


•0 


51 


51 





3 





650 


4,500 


525 


27 


10 


17 


10 


4 


6 


27 


10 


17 


6 








2, 700 .526 


62 





62 


18 





18 


63 





63 


2 





451 


3,519 


527 


120 


55 


65 


56 


22 


34 


0) 


0) 


0) 


6 





1.000 


6,800 


528 


39 





39 


30 





30 


30 





30 


10 





6,500 


8,000 


529 


128 


73 


55 


30 


19 


11 


131 


66 


65 


7 





1,410 


7,518 


530 


87 


47 


40 


119 


.30 


89 


92 


53 


39 


10 





1,993 


6,406 


531 


106 


106 





140 


140 





131 


131 





4 





1,700 


6,000 


532 


32 


20 


12 








33 


17 


16 
34 







305 


1,200 
1 780 


533 


20 


9 


11 








53 


19 







■ 166 


534 


8 


6 


2 








14 




7 


3 





206 


1,566 


535 


18 


7 


11 


100 


56 


44 


15 


6 


9 


3 


100 





1,200 




110 





110 


108 





108 


115 





115 


2 





2,156 


5,270 


537 


43 





43 


24 





24 


26 





26 


1 








2,400 


538 


47 


15 


32 








45 


21 


24 


8 







250 


800 
4,000 


539 
.540 


56 


30 


25 


43 


26 


17 


53 




25 


80 


38 


42 


145 


65 


80 


71 


35 


36 


7 





1,200 


4,526 


511 


121 


70 


51 


152 


81 


71 


97 


67 


30 


■4 


6,160 





10,000 


.542 


104 


52 


52 


136 


71 


65 


104 


52 


52 


12 








7,078 


543 


120 


52 


68 


14 


9 


5 


118 


45 


73 


6 





2, 229 


12, 372 544 


292 


174 


118 


62 


43 


19 


295 


176 


119 


15 





4,456 


31, 218 


545 


216 


127 


89 


40 


23 


17 


220 


126 


94 


21 








11, 185 


546 


82 


.0 


82 


50 





50 


85 





85 


7 





1,007 


8,600 


547 


50 





50 


34 





34 


58 





58 


3 





943 


6,000 


548 


103 


17 


86 


45 


17 


28 


100 


20 


80 


12 





1,943 


12, Oil 


549 


44 


15 


29 


280 


145 


135 


32 


12 


20 


7 








6,500 


550 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS= 

Table 1.— OEPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


Both.... 


1900 


Girls.... 


1827 


Both 


1843 


Both.... 


1891 


Both.... 


1853 


Boys 


1849 


Both.... 


1888 


Both.... 


1834 


Girls.... 


184B 


Girls.... 


1834 


Both.... 


1886 


Both.... 


1895 


Both.... 


1894 


Both.... 


1864 


Both.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1894 


Both.... 


1880 


Both.... 


1892 


Both.... 


1889 


Both.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1887 


Both.... 


1897 


Both.... 


1900 


Both.... 


1890 


Both.... 


1869 


Both.... 


1866 


Girls.... 


1880 


Both.... 


1891 


Girls.... 


1888 


Both.... 


1871 


Both.... 


1902 


Both.... 


1886 


Boys.... 


1886 



MISSOURI— Continued. 

St. Louis— Continued. 

Mothers and Babies' Home 

2825 Lawton avenue. 
Mullanphy Orphan Asylum . . . ■ 

Taylor and Maryland avenues. 

Orphans' Home 

1701 Grand avenue. 
Receivings Home 

810 Olive street. 
St. Ann's Fotmdling Asylum 

1236 North Tenth street. 
St. Joseph's Male Orphan Asylum 

Grand avenue and Itaska street. 
St. Louis Colored Orphan Asylum 

4216A Natural Bridge road. 
St. Louis Protestant Orphan Asylum 

Webster Groves. 
St. Mary's Female Orphan Asylum 

Emerson and Harney avenues. 
St. Philomena's Industrial School 

2900 Clark avenue. 
South Side Day Nursery 

1621 South Tenth street. 
Spickardsville: 

Little Star Children's Home 

Springfield: 

Springfield Children's Protestant Home 

430 South Jefferson street. 
Warrenton: 

Central Wesleyan Orphan Asylum 

MONTANA. 
Helena: 

St. Joseph's Orphan Home 

Twin Bridges: 

State Home for Destitute and Dependent Children 

NEBRASKA. 
Benson: 

St. James Orphanage 

Fremont: 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home 

Holdrege: 

Christian Orphan Home 

Lincoln: 

State Home for the Friendless 

Eleventh and South streets. 
Omaha: 

Creche, The 

1824 Harney street. 

Child Saving Institute 

Eighteenth and Ohio streets. 

Immanuel Orphans' Home 

Thirty-fourth street and Fowler avenue. 
York: 

Mother'.s Jewels' Home 

NEVADA. 
Carson City: 

State Orphans' Home 

NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
Concord: 

Orphans' Home 

Rolfe and Rumford Asylum 

Dover: 

Dover Children's Home 

Locust street. 

St. Mary's Orphanage 

Court street. 
Franklin: 

New Hampshire Orphans' Home 

Manchester: 

Infant Asylum of Our Lady of Perpetual Help .... 

Manchester Children's Home 

135 Webster street. 

St. Joseph's Boys' Home 

Hanover and Pine streets. 



National Benevolent Association of the 

Christian Church. 
Convent of the Sacred Heart 

Epi-scopal churches of St. Louis 

Children's Home Society of Missouri. . 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Children's Home Association.". 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Charity 

State of Montana 

Sisters of Mercy 

German Evangelical Lutheran Orphan 
Home Society. 

Private corporation 

State of Nebraska 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Immanuel Lutheran Deaconess Asso- 
ciation. 

Woman's Home Missionary Society of 
the Methodist Episcopal Church. 

State of Nevada , 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy , 

Private corporation , 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

1 Not reported. 



Care and training of poor girls 

Care of orphan and destitute children 



Care of foundlings. 



Care of destitute orphans and half 
orphans. 



Care and industrial training of orphan 

girls. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan and destitute children. . 
Care of friendless children 



Care and education of orphan children. 



Care of orphans 

Care of orphans ' 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of homeless and neglected chil- 
dren. 

Care and education of friendless chil- 
dren. 

Temporary care of orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of destitute girls 

Care and education of destitute chil- 
dren. 
Care and protection of girls 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphans under 3 years 

Care of neglected Protestant children. 

Care of orphan and deserted boys 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESEEIES— Continued. 



89 









NUMBBK OF CHILDREN. 












. 




"" 




















Number 
of paid 

ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 
























Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 












46 


26 


20 


0) 


(1) 


(') 


0) 


0) 


(') 


10 


$0 


80 


84,308 


551 


17 





17 


6 





6 


17 





17 











(1) 


552 


61 


30 


31 


10 


5 


5 


60 


31 


29 


11 





850 


8,625 


553 


40 


10 


30 


262 


160 


102 


32 


22 


10 


12 








13, 000 


554 


101 


50 


51 


362 


202 


160 


91 


52 




20 


5,706 


7,588 


10,000 


555 


201 


201 





75 


75 





212 


212 





3 





2, 050 


12, 320 


556 


33 


23 


10 


25 


13 


12 


33 


23 


10 


4 





650 


1, 825 


557 


80 


35 


45 


68 


42 


26 


98 


50 


48 


12 





2,432 


9,507 


558 


209 





209 


55 





55 


195 





195 


4 





2,073 


13,261 


559 


79 





79 


29 





29 


74 





74 


6 





7.52 


10, 056 


560 


40 
23 


17 
16 


23 








37 
16 


22 


15 

7 










66 


1,766 
1, 300 


561 


2 





2 


.562 


15 


9 


. . 6 


79 


35 


44 


20 


10 


10 


' 





300 


1,000 


563 


76 


51 


25 


19 


14 


5 


76 


51 


25 


10 





970 


6,510 


564 


201 


92 


109 


93 


51 


42 


203 


95 


108 


1 


392 


8,557 


14,383 


-565 


12.5 


80 


45 


86 


44 


42 


129 


73 


56 


16 







21,612 


566 


92 


42 


50 


83 


44 


39 


94 


43 


51 











6.800 


567 


35 


24 


11 


14 


8 


6 


d7 


21 


16 


2 





'200 


2,500 


568 


69 


40 


29 


9 


7 


2 


57 


30 


27 


10 








4,500 


569 


80 


50 


30 


98 


59 


39 


60 


39 


21 


18 




8.55 


14, 663 


570 


27 


14 


13 








34 


18 


16 


5 





1,145 


2,400 


571 


41 


■ 25 


16 


285 


164 


121 


49 


34 


15 


10 








9,522 


572 


16 


4 


12 











13 


4 


9 








472 


1,794 


573 




50 


43 


37 


21 


16 


83 


48 


35 


11 








' 8, 500 


.574 


63 


33 


30 


9 


4 


5 


56 


28 


28 


10 




709 


16, 200 


575 


43 


25 


18 


2 





2 


41 


23 


18 


8 





712 


6,179 


576 


14 





14 


1 





1 


15 





15 


4 








4,000 


577 


40 


27 


13 


13 


8 


5 


42 


28 


14 


6 





1,600 


3,000 


578 


24 





24 


8 





8 


21 





21 








S25 


1,849 


579 


130 


90 


40 


71 


48 


23 


133 


94 


39 


25 


4,486 


7,730 


12,000 


580 


31 


17 


14 


(') 


{■) 


(1) 


(') 


(') 


(') 


6 





(') 


(M 


581 


44 


22 


22 


23 


11 


12 


44 


22 


22 


6 





2, 388 


4,313 


582 


146 


146 





30 


30 





140 


140 





2 





2 8,000 


= 20,000 


583 



2 Includes St. Patrick's Orphanage for Girls 



90 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received 



NEW HAMPSHIRE— Continued. 

Man Chester — Continued . 

St. Patrick's Orphanage for Girls 

184 Hanover street. 



St. Vincent's Orphanage 

253 Lake avenue. 
Nashua: 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery and Children's Home. 

57^ Amherst street. 



Portsmouth: 

Chase Home for Children. 
41 Court street. 



NEW JERSEY. 
Camden: 

Camden Day Nursery 

318 Bridge avenue. 

Camden Home for Friendless Children 

Spencer street and Hudson avenue. 

West Jersey Orphanage 

Sixth and Mechanic streets. 



East Orange: 

Orphan Home, The 

197 Harrison street 
Elizabeth: 

Egenolf Day Nurserv 

1140 Elizabeth 



Elizabeth Orphan Asylum 

Murray and Cherry streets. 
Englewood: 

Daisy Fields Home and Hospital for Crippled Chil- 
dren. 



Hackensack: 

Bergen County Children's Home . 
79 Essex street. 
Hoboken: 

Memorial Day Nur.sery 

220 Willow avenue. 
Hopewell : 

St. Michael's Orphan Asylum 



Jersey City: 

Children's Home 

134 Glenwood avenue. 

Christian Home for Orphan Children. 

178 Magnolia avenue. 



St. Mary's Girls' Orphan Asylum 

Jersey avenue and Second street. 
St. Michael's Orphanage 

Pavonia avenue and Erie street. 



Hudson County Catholic Proteccory 

Belgrove drive (Arlington). 
Italian Protectory 

Belgrove drive (Arlington). 
Ridgely Home for Orphans of Odd Fellows. 
(Arlington). 



Montclair: 

Children's Home 

121 Gates avenue. 



Mt. Holly: 
Burlingto 



Countv Children's Home . 



Sisters of Mercy . . 
Sisters of Charity . 
Sisters of Charity . 



Private association . 
Sisters of Charity . . . 



Private corporation . 

Private association . . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private association . . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private association . . 



Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Associated Charities of Jersey City 

Private corporation 



Franciscan Sis*ers of the Immaculate 

Conception. 
Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace 



Sisters of Charity. 
Sisters of Charity. 



Roman Catholic Diocese of Newark 

Sisters of the Pious Society of Missions. 

Private association 

Sisters of the Sacred Heart 



Care of orphan and dependent girls 

Care of orphan boys 

Care and education of poor children. . . 

Care of children of poor parents 

Care of orphan and dependent children . 
Care of destitute children , 



Girls. 
Boys. 



Care of homeless children. 



Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of friendless children 

Care of destitute colored children 



Care of orphan and friendless children 
Care of children of working mothers.. 
Support of destitute children 



To provide a farm school for boys 

Care of orphan and dependent children 
Care of children of working mothers 



Care of children of working mothers. 



Care of destitute orphan girls . 



To educate orphan girls. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Boys. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 



Care of wayward boys 

Care of Italian orphans 

Care of Odd Fellows' orphans. 
Care of poor girls 



joys 



Private association. 
Sisters of Charity... 



Care of unfortunate children 
Care of foundlings 



Boys. 
Both. 
Girls. 

Both. 
Both. 



Included in St. Joseph's Boys' Home 



Care of orphan and neglected children, 
2 Opened July, 1903. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESERIES— Continued. 



91 



s'UMBER OF CHILDKEN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining- December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 
from pay 
inmates, 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance. 



2,400 



143 
1, 

106 
3,000 



$3,774 
4,500 
1,567 

6,000 
2, 175 



' Not reported. 



92 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3 ,— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



VD LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Q„.. _f Year 



NEW JERSEY— Continued. 

New Brunswick: 

Children's Industrial Home 

190 Somerset street. 
Colored Industrial and Literary Institute 

110 Comstock street. 

Das' Nursery 

Newark: 

Children's Aid and Society for the Prevention of 
Cruelty to Children. 

249 Mulberry street. 
Crazy Jane Day Nursery 

Hill and Halsey streets. 
Eighth Avenue Baby Shelter and Day Nursery 

61 Eighth avenue. 
Hebrew Orphan Asylum 

536 Clinton avenue. 
Home for Crippled Children 

190 Clifton avenue. 
Home for the Friendless 

South Orange avenue and Bergen street. 
Jay Street Day Nursery 

lb Jay street. 
Newark Orphan Asylum 

323-325 High street. 
Protestant Foster Home 

284 Belleville avenue. 
St. Peter's Orphan Asylum 

21 Livingston street. 
Orange: 

Day Nursery of the Oranges 

64 Center street. 
St. John's CrSche 

125 White street. 
Parsippany: 

Morris County Children's Home 

Passaic: 

Passaic Day Nursery 

Jefferson and Columbia streets. 
Passaic Home and Orphan Asylum 

64 River drive. 
Paterson: 

Memorial Day Nursery 

Grand and Hamilton streets. 
Paterson Orphan Asylum 

Market and Penington streets. 
St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

(Totowa.) 
Plainfield: 

Children's Home 

146 Jackson avenue. 
Rah way: 

Children's Home and Orphan Asylum 

Ridgefield: 

Elkanah Home 

Somerville: 

Hiram Deats Memorial Home 

South Amboy: 

Christ Church Home 

Summit: 

Arthur Home 

Trenton: 

Children's Day Nursery 

340 North Montgomery street. 

Receiving Home 

Brunswick avenue. 

St. James Day Nursery 

136 North Warren street. 
Vailsburg: 

St. Joseph's Industrial School 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum 

West Hoboken: 

Holy Rosary Institution 

317 Spring street. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation , 
Private association . . 
Private corporation . 



Private association 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Second Presbyterian Church of Newark. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Notre Dame 



Care of destitute Protestant children... 

Care and education of colored children. 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care and aid of homeless and neglected 
children. 

Care of children of working mothers .. 

emporar; 
infants. 
Care of orphans 



Care of friendless children 

Care of children of working mothe 



Care of orphan and destitute children. 
Care of orphans and half orphans 



Private association . 
Sisters of Charity. . . 



Private corporation . 
Private association . . 
Private association . . 



Care of children of working mothers.. 
Care of children of working mothers. . 

Temporary care of destitute children . 
Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of destitute children 



Private association . 
Private corporation 
Sisters of charity . - . 



Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphan girls 



Private association . 

Private association . 
Private association . 



Episcopal Sisters of St. John the Baptist. 

Episcopal Church 

Private association 

New Jersey Children's Home Society .. 
Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart . . . 



Care of orphan and destitute children . . 

Temporary care of orphan and desti- 
tute children. 

Care of poor children and half orphans. 

Care of homeless children 

Care of destitute boys 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 
Temporary care of homeless children.. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 



Sisters of Charity. 
Sisters of Charity . 
Sisters of Charity. 



Care of orphans 

Care of Italian orphans 

• Included in St. Mary's Orphan Asylum. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both . 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Botn. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Girle. 
Both. 
Girls. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



93 



NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 
from pay 
inmates, 



■1, 674 





434 

168 

823 



5,025 
113 



(-) 

3 12, 200 

1, 



$2,837 
2,147 



1,900 
1,001 



20,000 
5,558 



8,748 
1,217 : 

2,200 : 

j 

9,691 
6,500 



(M 

312,000 
6,000 



3 Includes St. Joseph's Industrial School. 



94 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



NEW MEXICO. 
Albuquerque: 

Harwood Industrial Home 

Fourteenth and Harrison streets. 
Santa Fe: 

St. Vincent's Orphanage ; 



NEW YORK. 
Albany: 

Albany Orphan Asylum 

Western avenue and Kobin street. 



House of Detention 

Eagle street. 

St. Col man's Orphan Asylum 

St. Francis de Sales Asylum 

Clinton and Catherine streets. 



Auburn: 

Auburn Orphan Asylum. 
124 North street. 



Davenport Home for Female Orphan 
Bingham ton: 

St. Mary's Orphans' Home 

Susquehanna Valley Home 

Blauvelt: 

Asylum of the Sisters of St. Dominic . 

Bronxville: 

Society of St. Martha 

Elm Eock road. 
Brooklyn: 3 

Annunciation Orphan Home ' 

64 Havemeyer street. 



Bethlehem Orphan and Half Orphan .\sylum. 

College Point. 
Brooklyn Children's Aid Society '.. 

61 Poplar street. 
Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum 

"373-393 Ralph avenue. 



Brooklyn Industrial Home for Destitute Children 

"217 Sterling place. - 
Brooklyn Society Home Shelter 

103-107 S"chermerhorn street. 



Sisters of Charity. 



Private corporation , 



Mohawk and Hudson River Humane 
Society. 

Presentation Nuns 

Sisters of Charity 



Sisters of Charity 

Corning Foundation of Christian Work 

Sisters of Charity 

Brothers of the Christian Schools 



Nuns of the Order of St. Dominic . 

Private association -. 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



Private corporation 
Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph 
Private corporation 



Sisters of St. Dominic. 
Private association . . . 



Nuns of the Order of St. Dominic . 

Brooklyn Bureau of Charities 

German Lutheran Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Home of the Sorrowful Mother i 

Harrison place and Bogart street 



Brooklyn Bureau of Charities .... 

Private corporation 

Nuns of the Order of St. Dominic 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Private association 

Private corporation 

King's Daughters 

Brooklyn Bureau of Charities 

Private corporation 

Nuns of the Order of St. Dominic , 
1 Branch of Orphan Home, 1-53 Graham avenue, Brooklyn. 



Kallman Scandinavian Orphanage 

Sixty-seventh street and Eighteenth av 



Care and training of Mexican (Span- 
ish-American) girls. 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and neg- 
lected children. 
Temporary care of delinquent children 

Care of destitute boys and girls 

Care of orphan and destitute children. . 

Care Of indigent girls 

Care of homeless, sick, and destitute 

children. 
Care of orphan and destitute children. . 

Care and training of orphan boys 

Care and training of orphan and des- 
titute girls. 

Care of destitute children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of orphan and half orphan girls. . 

Care and training of homeless children 
Care of orphan and indigent children.. 

Care of destitute and committed chil- 
dren. 

Industrial training of young girls 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of homeless children 

Care of Hebrew orphans 

Care of destitute colored orphans 

Care of destitute children 

Temporary care of children under 16 

years. 
Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Home for destitute crippled children. . 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of homeless children 

Care of children of working parents... 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of orphan and destitute children.. 

- Not reported. 



Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 

Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 

Boys. 

Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls., 



Girls. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESERIES— Continued. 



95 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


Income 

from pay 

mmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




38 





38 


42 





42 


42 





42 


4 


SO 


SI, 158 


S3, 637 


650 


50 





50 


89 





89 


64 





64 


5 


5,071 


50 


4,300 


651 


286 


175 


ni 


228 


134 


94 


361 


213 


148 


46 


29,000 


315 


44,905 


652 


6 


2 


4 


540 


439 


101 


15. 


10 


5 


4 


1,123 





3,189 


653 


98 


51 


47 


41 


20 


21 


114 


59 


55 


5 





390 


11,020 


654 


82 


39 


43 


40 


20 


20 


51 


25 


26 


2 


5,075 


393 


4,864 


655 


35 





35 


4 





4 


36 





36 


6 








3,556 


656 


4] 


21 


20 


83 


49 


34 


59 


32 


27 


10 


4,378 


271 


8,400 


657 


.238 


39 


199 


87 


23 


64 


220 


32 


188 


8 


13, 024 


4,871 


22, 750 


658 


162 


162 





83 


83 





179 


179 





22 


12,251 


1,027 


14,269 


659 


30 





30 


8 





8 


27 





27 


4 


(1) 


0) 


(1) 


660 


29 


18 


• 11 


23 


16 


7 


20 


11 


9 


4 


812 


790 


2,641 


661 


128 


77 


51 


31 


18 


13 


97 


48 


49 


4 


7,040 


1,361 


9,700 


662 


76 


41 


35 


43 


18 


25 


67 


34 


33 


12 


(^) 


953 


8,355 


663 


60 





60 


71 





71 


71 





71 


10 








12,810 


664 


127 


74 


53 


33 


23 


10 


109 


67 


42 


2 


9,242 


2,649 


8,574 


665 


122 


84 


38 


86 


56 


30 


125 


91 


34 


21 


12, 102 





13,815 


666 


<85 


206 


279 


221' 


110 


111 


485 


206 


279 


14 


43, 361 





42,181 


667 


12 





12 


4 





4 


12 





12 


4 





600 


7,000 


668 


39 





39 


34 





34 


50 





50 


4 


(') 


(') 


(') 


669 


15 


7 














5 


1 





231 


(-) 
8,000 


670 


127 


80 


47 


23 


13 


10 


129 


78 


51 


11 





2, 000 


671 


138 


106 


32 


288 


245 


43 


156 


120 


36 


17 


9,153 


2,673 


19, 134 


672 


312 


177 


135 


60 


29 


31 


312 


173 


lae 


33 


31,915 





39, 564 


673 


126 


65 


61 


79 


43 


36 


167 


90 


77 


22 


8,511 


7,729 


20,522 


674 


259 


151 


108 


184 


104 


80 


314 


178 


136 


41 


21, 041 


2,665 


44,466 


675 


13 


9 


4 


2,601 


{') 


n 


25 


19 


6 


22 


6,000 





19,605 


676 


(2) 


n 

7 


2 








(-) 
18 


(-) 

10 


8 


2 


(-) 




381 




677 


9 










1,000 


678 


152 


66 




159 


89 


70 


187 


90 


97 


12 


0) 


0) 


679 


62 


33 


29 


(^) 


{') 


(-) 


(-) 


(=) 


(-) 


16 


8,166 


230 


15, 559 


680 


140 


66 


74 








224 


94 


130 


4 





300 


1,500 


681 


50 


30 


20 


84 


45 


39 


60 




22 




° 


962 


2,892 


682 


7 


6 


1 








17 


9 


8 


3 





250 


1,000 


683 


11 


5 


6 








5 


2 


3 


1 





4,913 


37, 572 


684 


246 


157 




103 


56 


47 


257 


159 




47 


10,459 




37 


7 


30 


327 


195 


132 


34 


5 


29 


5 


4 63,871 


4 3,008 


* 67, 770 


686 



> Part of New York city. 



'Includes 6 branches. 



96 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


Both.... 


1857 


Both.... 


1892 


Both.... 


1895 


Boys.... 


1834 


Both.... 


1896 


Girls.... 


1873 


Both.... 


1876 


Both.... 


1895 


Girls.... 


1839 


Boys.... 


, 1869 


Both 


1870 


Both.... 


1902 


Both.... 


1837 


Girls.... 


1864 


Both.... 


1902 


Both.... 


1864 


Both.... 


1880 


Both.... 


1875 


Both.... 


1903 


Both.... 


1850 


Girls.... 


1848 


Boys.... 


1888 


Boys 


1890 


Both.... 


1863 


Both.... 


1870 


Boys.... 


1895 


Both.... 


1870 


Both.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1858 


Both.... 


1865 


Boys.... 


1900 


Both.... 


1893 


Both.... 


1895 


Both.... 


1886 


Both.... 


1901 


Boys.... 


18S0 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

Brooklyn— Continued. 

Orphan House , 

Albany avenue and Herkimer street. 



St. Agnes South Brooklyn Day Nursery . 

419 Degraw street. 
St. John's Home 

992 St. Marks avenue. 



St. Joseph's Female Orphan Asylum 

Willoughby and Sumner avenues. 



St. Paul's Industrial School 

Congress and Clinton streets. 
St. Vincent's Home 

7 Poplar street. 



State Sunshine Day Nursery. 

1739 Atlantic avenue. 
Buffalo: 

Buffalo Orphan Asylum 

403 Virginia street. ■ 



Evangelical Lutheran St. John's Orphan Home. 



German Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum. 
564 Dodge street. 



Working Boys' Home 

35 Niagara square. 
Canandaigua: 

Ontario Orphan Asylum 

Castleton Corners, Long Island: ■> 

Nursery and Child's Hospital 

Charlton: 

Charlton Industrial Farm School . . . 

Cooperstown: 

Orphan House of the Holy Saviour . . 
Dobbs Ferry: 

St. Christopher's Home for Children. 
(Ingleside.) 
Dunkirk: 

St. Mary's Home and School 

319 Washington avenue. 
Elmira: 

Southern Tier Orphans' Home 

300 Franklin street. 



Flushing:* 

United Workers' Day Nursery 
16 Jamaica avenue. 
Freeville: 

George Junior Republic 



Gerry: 

Gerry Orphanage 

Hartsdale: 

St. Mary of the Angels. 
Hicksville, Long Island: 
St. John's Protectory . . . 



Private corporation . 
Private association . . 
Sisters of St. Joseph . 
Private corporation , 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of St. Joseph . 
Private association . . 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation . 
Episcopal Church . . . 
Private association . . 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 



Western New Y'ork Branch of the As- 
sociation of Collegiate .\lumnae. 

Evangelical Lutheran churches of Buf- 
falo. 

Charity Organization Society of Buffalo. 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Fran- 
cis. 
Felician Sisters 



Sisters of Charity 

Si.sters of Charity 

Buffalo Children's Aid Society . 
Sisters of St. Joseph 



Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Albany. 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private corporation 



Nuns of the Order of St. Dominii 
United Workers 



Private association . 



Free Methodist Church 
Sisters of Misericorde. . . 



Care of orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of destitute Catholic children... 
Care of children of working i 



Care of Catholic orphans and half 

orphans. 
Care of destitute children 



Care of children of working mothers. 



Care of homeless boys 

Care of destitute children under 7 years . 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of destitute and wayward Catholic 

children. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of indigent children 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 



Care of destitute girls . . 
Care of homeless boys . . 
To assist homeless boys 



Care of orphan and destitute children . 
Care of destitute and needy children . . 



Care of destitute orphans 



Care of orphan and de.stitute children. 
Care of destitute children 



Not reported. 



' Included in Asylum of Our Lady of Refuge. 



Care of orphan and destitute boys 

Care of children of working parents . . . 

Care and reformation of wayward and 
neglected children. 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of destitute infants 

Care of friendless boys 

8 Opened November 1, 1903. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



97 



■NUMBEK OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 

annual 

subsidy 

from public 

funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1908. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1908. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




46 


22 


24 


9 


6 


3 


46 


23 


28 


10 


$2,260 


$947 


S9, 176 


687 


57 


35 


22 


16 


10 


5 


56 


36 


21 


5 


105 


810 


4,170 


688 


29 


12 


17 








29 


11 


18 


2 








1,084 


689 


1,240 


1,240 





467 


467 





1,261 


1,261 





48 




1,4.50 


96, 499 


690 


29 


19 


10 








18 


7 


11 


2 








882 


691 


,553 





553 


223 





223 


628. 





628 


26 


31, 945 


1,103 


42,415 


692 


669 


323 


336 


361 


196 


165 


741 


822 


419 


20 


75,303 





74,362 


693 


186 


74 


111 








140 


0) 




0) 
140 


2 





133 


642 


694 


121 





121 


81 







81 


1 





3,310 


9,317 




40 


40 





(M 


0) 


0) 


0) 


0) 


(') 


0)- 





(') 


(') 


696 


61 


31 


30 


67 


30 


37 


67 


37 


30 


21 


2,691 


824 


7,591 


697 


(') 


(') 


58 








10 


g 


4 


r, 





50 


1, 500 
17, 264 


698 


129 


71 


253 


127 


126 


145 


79 


06 


20 


6,201 


1,897 


699 


71 





71 


49 





49 


74 





74 


6 


C-) 


(-) 


(=) 


700 


13 


7 


6 








30 


10 


20 


3 





149 


1,527 


701 


61 


34 


27 


27 


18 


9 


78 


45 


33 


10. 


858 


1, 656 


9,714 


702 


48 


21 


27 








37 


19 


18 


12 





41'> 


6,028 
26, 103 


708 
704 


. 300 


193 


107 


222 


118 


104 


342 




144 


7 


11, 385 


3,750 


12 


7 


5 








''I 


11 


10 








(3) 

6,000 


21,000 


706 


180 


91 




(M 


C) 


■(') 


0) 


(>) 


(') 


30 


2,438 


706 


281 





281 


102 





102 


271 





271 


10 


7,118 


(') 


18,726 


707 


85 


35 





241 


241 





37 


37 





6 


300 


1,313 


4, 761 


708 


60 


60 





198 


198 





64 


64 





4 





2, .500 


9,000 


.709 


« 


34 


13 


14 


11 


3 


35 


25 


10 


10 


641 


958 


7,490 


710 


181 


- 89 


92 


176 


94 


82 


197 


97 


100 


48 


12, 673 


1,869 


81,545 


711 


31 


31 





2 


2 





32 


. 32 





8 


422 


436 


6,898 


712 


48 


37 


11 


26 


11 


14 


60 


33 


17 


14 


4, 580 


1,262 


8,609 


., 


126 


56 


70 


20 


7 


13 


122 


55 


67 


18 





. 300 


18,000 


714 


83 


40 


43 


89 


41 


48 


72 


86 


86 


10 


8,937 


4,073 


9,186 




30 


19 


11 


28 


20 


« 


32 


21 


11 


8 


2,587 


477 


3,9.30 


716 


271 


271 





84 


84 





318 


818 





12 


{') 


(') 


{=) 


717 


34 


18 


16 








36 






5 
23 






334 
4,662 


1,299 
26, .598 


718 
719 


113 


79 


34 


55 


33 


22 


120 


67 


53 


58 


36 


22 


14 


8 


6 


30 


20 


10 


7 





2, .533 


3,847 


720 


94 


42 


52 


0) 


(M 


(M - 


94 


42 


52 


4 


3,866 





16,000 


721 


122 


122 





27 


27 





126 


126 





11 








IS, 246 


722 



Part of New 

7 



Branch of Orpban Home, 1.53 Graliam avenue, Brooklyn. 



98 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 




Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 

when 
found- 
ed. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 
Hudson: 

Hudson Orphan and Relief Association 
State and Fourth streets. 
Iroquois: 

Thomas Asylum 



Ithaca: 

Ithaca Children's Home 

116 West Seneca street. 



Kingston; 

Industrial Home of tlie City of Kingston . 
351 Broadway. 
Lockport: 

Lockport Home for the Friendless 

Long Island City:i 

St. Joseph's Home - 

Grand avenue and Grace street. 



, Vernon: 
Day Nursery 

Ninth avenue and First street. 
Wartburg Orphans' Farm School 



Nanuet: 

St. Agatha Home for Children . 
New Brighton, Staten Island :i 

Home for Seamen's Children . . 



New Brighton Day Nursery 

New Hyde Park: 

St. Dominie's Home- 

New Rochelle; 

New Rochelle Day Nursery 

367 Huguenot street. 
New York:* 

Armitage Day Nursery 

501 West Fiftieth street. 



Day Nursery 

154 West Ninety-ninth street. 
Brightside Day Nursery 

89 Cannon street. 



Catharine Mission Day Nursery , 

22-24 Catharine slip. 
Children's Temporary Home , 

442 West Twenty-third street. 
Colored Orphan Asylum , 

One hundred and Forty-third street and 
Amsterdam avenue. 



Forty-fourth Street Lodging House. . 

247 East Forty-fourth street. 
Grace Church Day Nursery 

94 Fourth avenue. 
Halsev Day Nursery 

227 East Fifty-ninth street. 

1 Part of New York city. 



Private association . 
State of New York . 
Private association . 



New York Conference of Swedish 
Lutheran Augustana Synod. 



Private corporation 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Nuns of the Order of St. Dominic . 



Orange county , 

Private corporation 



People's Institute 

Evangelical Lutheran Church . 
Sisters of Charity 



Private association . 



Private association 

Nuns of the Order of St. Dominic . 
Private association 



Fifth Avenue Baptist Church 

Sisters Marianites of the Holy Cross. . . 
Madison Avenue Reformed Church . . . 

Church of the Incarnation 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private association 



Dominican Sisters 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Grace Protestant Episcopal Church . 



Care of orphan and indigent children 



Care of orphans and half orphans 



Care of Swedish orphans . 



Care of orphan and neglected children . 



Care of orphan and friendless children 
Care of orphan and destitute children 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 



Care of destitute children. 



Care of children of working mothers . 



Care and training of orphans and half 
orphans. 



Care of orphan and destitute children. 



Care of children of seamen . 



Both. 
Both. 



Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan and destitute girls 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of destitute and unprotected or- 
phan and half orphan children. 

Care of children of working or sick ' Both, 
mothers. ■ 

Care of children of working mothers... | Both. 



Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of homeless and needy children 
Care of colored children 



Care of destitute children 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care and instruction of Jewish children 

of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 



Care of homeless boys 

Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 



Both. 



Both.. 



Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 



-Branch of Orphan Home, 153 Graham avenue, Brooklyn. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



99 









NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 








Number 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 


Total cost 




















On January 1,1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 


of paid 
ployees. 


from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 




31 


21 


10 


23 


17 


fi 


39 


28 


11 


8 


S2, 247 


8250 


$7, 600 


723 


155 
9 


62 
6 


3 


23 
13 


15 
6 


8 

7 


l<! 

9 


64 
6 


98 


32 
3 





536 


25, 741 
1,300 


724 


340 


725 


62 


39 


23 


17 


12 


5 


66 


42 


24 


9 


1,242 


125 


6,937 


726 


22 


11 


11 


3 


1 


-' 


23 


12 


11 


3 








. 3,500 


727 


30 


18 


12 


23 


13 


10 


33 


22 


11 


7 


1,156 


5.58 


3,142 


728 


48 


26 


22 


91 


46 


45 


55 


36 


19 


13 


2,986 


949 


6,783 


729> 


59 





59 


20 





20 


55 





55 


4 


(=) 


i") 


(2) 


730- 


33 


24 


9 


23 


12 


11 


24 


18 


6 


5 







4,132 
4,607 


731 


39 


17 


22 


17 


9 


8 


37 


21 


16 


7 





3,090 


732 


45 


16 


29 








51 


26 


25 






200 



3,000 
12,000. 


733 
734 


230 


125 


• 105 


(■') 


(') 


(») 


(') 


{') 


(') 


16 





492 


272 


220 


246 


131 


115 


600 


319 


281 


34 


34,899 


1,192 


45,239 


735. 


101 


55 


46 


24 


13 


11 


112 


62 


50 


14 





989 


16, 496 


736; 


5 


2 


3 


40 


34 


6 


3 


1 


2 


2 


1,000 


21 


1,521 


737,- 


5 


3 


2 








g 





69 


2 
1 




{■) 


102 

(2) 


508 


73» 
739.' 


56 





56 


33 





33 


69 





51 


22 


29 








76 


36 


40 


4 





139 


1,528 


im 








52 


24 










57 


21 


36 

143 





8,221 


324 
6, 388 


2,500 
22,764 


V4U. 
742- 


218 


77 


141 


60 


30 


30 


218 


75 


2 


61 


30 


31 








65 


30 


35 


8 





802 


2,859 


743 








92 


54 


38 








• 78 


47 


31 


8 





759 


3,845 


744 








15 


9 


6 








3 


2 


1 


4 





312 


7,858 


745 








100 


52 


48 








10: 


50 


55 


12 





849 


5,479 


746- 








62 


30 


32 








67 


30 


37 


'' 






607 
296 


4,171 
3,110 


747/ 
748; 


(?) 


e) 


m 








(') 


. (') 








12 


3 


9 


165 


37 


128 


8 


3 


5 


5 








3,063 


749 


301 


181 


120 


95 


45 


50 


324 


191 


133 


45 


19, 759 


394 


40, 281 


7.50 


223 





223 


193 





193 


326 





326 


20 


5.50,036 


5 466 


5,59,430 


751 


30 


15 


15 








15 


7 


8 


4 








2,500 


752' 








38 


20 


18 








36 


19 


17 


4 





36 


2,-670 


753 








96 


59 


37 








70 


37 


33 


6 





146 


1,456 


754 








86 


86 





1,009 


1,009 





89 


89 





8 


3,819 


3,760 


10,127 


755 


94 


40 


54 









202 


83 


119 


16 





626 


5,993 


756 








64 


31 


33 








68 


31 


37 


7 





.542 


3,377 


757 


1 







< Includes Manhattan and Bronx boroughs on 
and Stapleton. 

5 Includes St. Agnes Convent, Sparkill. 



ly ; for other boroughs see Brooklyn, Castleton Corners, Flushing, Long Island City, New Brighton, Port Richmond, 



100 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1 — ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

New York— Continued. 

Hamilton Street Day Nursery 

15 Hamilton street. 



Hebrew Orphan Asylum 

Amsterdam avenue between One hundred and 
thirty-sixth and One hundred and thirty- 
eighth streets. 
Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society 

One hundred and fiftieth street and Broadway. 
Holy Family Day Nursery 

250-254 East One hundred and twelfth street. 
Home for the Friendless 

936 Woody Crest avenue. 
Hope Day Nursery 

325 West Thirty-fifth street. 
House of the Annunciation 

518 West One hundred and fifty-second street. 
Howard Mission and Home for Little Wanderers 

225 East Eleventh street. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Hamilton House . - - 
Private corporation 
Private corporation 



Jewell Day Nursery 

20 Macdougal street. 



Lisa DavNursery 

458 West Twentieth street. 
Little Missionary's Day Nursery 

93 St. Marks place. 
Mes.siah Home for Children 

East One hundred and seventy-seventh street 
and Aqueduct avenue. 



Orphans' Home and Asylum 

Presentation Day Nursery 

315-317 East Thirty-thu-d street. 



Riverside Day Nursery 

121 West Sixty-third street. 
Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum 

Sedgwick avenue and Kings Bridge road. 
Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum 

(West Park.) 



Ann's Home for Destitute Children . 
Ninetieth street and Avenue A. 

1 Industrial School 

235 East Fourteenth street. 



St. John's Day Nursery 

223 East Sixty-seventh street. 

St. Joseph's Asylum 

Eighty-ninth street and Avenue A. 



St. Vincent de Paul's Day Nursery .. 
69 Washington square, south. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

American Female Guardian Society. 

Private association 

Si.sters of the Annunciation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private corporation 



Sisters of St. Francis. . . 

Sisters of Charity 

Children's Aid Society 
Private corporation . . . 



Protestant Episcopal Church. 



Society for the Relief of Half Orphan 
and Destitute Children in the City 
of New York. 

Private association 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of the Sacred Heart 

Ascension Church 

Private association 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Notre Dame 

Private association 

Christian Brothers 

Sisters Marianites of the Holy Cross 

Salvation Army 

Private corporation 

1 Opened May 11, 1903 



Specific object of institution. 



Care of children of working mothers. 



Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of destitute children 



Care of destitute children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working parents. . 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
To assist working mothers 



Sex 
children 
received. 



Care of homeless and destitute chil- 
dren. 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of homeless boys 

Care and training of destitute orphans 

Care of orphans and half orphans 

Care of children and assistance to 

their mothers. 
Care of half orphans 



Care of children of working mothers. 



Care of orphans 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of children of working mothers. . 

Care of destitute children 

Care and training of destitute girls 

Care and training of destitute girls 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and neg- 
lected children. 
Care of children of working parents . . . 

To provide a home for homeless work- 
ing boys. 
Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of homeless children 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 

Both.. 

Boys.. 

Both.. 

Both.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 

Both.. 
Both.. 
Girls.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Girls.. 
Girls.. 
Girls.. 



Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUKSERIES— Continued. 



101 



! NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 

from pay 

inmates", 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1. 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 








31 


14 


17 








26 


13 


13 


3 


10 


$292 


$2, 000 


758 


151 


77 


74 


58 


34 


24 


150 




72 


27 


14,676 





18,647 


759 


979 


590 


389 


268 


153 


115 


1,009 


.598 


411 


124 


93,146 





141,000 


760 


699 


430 


269 


374 


238 


136 


775 


466 


309 


90 


68,908 





98,198 


761 


55 


25 


30 








115 


43 


75 








250 


1,800 


762 


175 




87 


128 


62 


66 


192 


93 


99 


34 


8,353 


4,415 


30,363 


763 


33 


12 


21 








23" 


5 


18 


4 





(1) 


(') 


764 


15 





15 


1 





1 


14 





14 


4 








2,912 


765. 


17 


5 


12 


12 


5 


7 


17 


5 


12 


5 








1,400 


766. 


6.54 


326 


328 


328 


162 


166 


706 


356 


350 


74 


61,937 


36, 6.55 


94, 686 


767 


33 
53 


17 
33 


16 
20 








53 


26 
30 


27 
35 


6 
6 






318 
295 


3,400 
3,046 


768. 








769 


23 




15 








38 


20 


18 







611 


4,695 


770 


70 


45 


25 








60 


38 


22 


. 










771 




11 


25 


18 


5 


13 


36 


11 


25 


7 





2,215 


6,844 


772 


1,440 


1,081 


359 


649 


489 


160 


1,607 


1,198 


409 


203 


81,283 


15, 299 


254, 948 


773 


44 


21 


23 








53 


21 


32 


3 





492 


1,800 


774 


64 


64 





139 


139 





139 


139 





10 





1,556 


6,339 


775- 


200 


98 


102 


42 


20 


22 


206 


102 


104 


38 








41,000 


776. 


97 


53 


44 


12 


8 


4 


75 


40 


35 


20 





941 


20,205 


■777 


48 


26 


22 








50 


31 


19 


3 





366 


2,672 


778 


174 


97 




57 


35 


22 


165 


100 


65 


27 


4,089 


7,034 


23, 456 


779 


■ 84 


44 


40 









33 


16 


j7 


5 





500 


3,600 


780 


763 


439 


324 


195 


102 


93 




437 


346 


23 


9,615 





88, 103 


781 


118 





118 


57 





57 


141 





141 


4 


6,667 


194 


10,747 


782: 


68 


37 


31 








48 


26 


22 


fi 





475 


3,100 


783. 


37 


17 


20 








37 


17 


20 








406 


2,000 
30, 175 


784 


316 





316 


44 





44 


300 





300 


8 


25, 031 





785. 


65 





65 


12 





12 


54 





54 


6 


5, 396 


2,099 


4,265 


786. 


120 





120 


33 





33 


153 





153 


10 


11, 000 


812 


11,223 


787 


157 


82 


75 








180 


97 


83 


4 





682 


1,111 


788 


786 


470 


316 


241 


146 


95 


814 


495 


319 


16 


76,139 


4,3.56 


84,000 


789 


70 


35 


35 









49 


25 


24 


6 





719 


2,300 


79a 


42 


42 





70 


70 





35 


35 





3 





4,458 


7,000 


791 


431 


175 


256 








457 


199 


258 


2 





0' 


6, .585 


792 


22 
146 


10 
70 


12 
76 








24 

157 


11 

74 

1 


13 

33 


1 
22 






304 
4, .552 


655 


793 


108 


64 


44 


794 



102 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



JAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
cliildren 
received. 



Year 

when 
found- 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

New York — Continued. 

Silver Cross Day Nursery 

249 East One hundred and seventeenth street. 



Washington Heights Day Nursery . 

29 Bradhurst avenue. 
Wayside Day Nursery 

216 East Twentieth street. 



Winifred Day Nursery 

Seventy-sixth street and : 
Newburg: 

Children's Home 

18 High street. 

Home for the Friendless 

165 Montgomery street. 



Ogdensburg: 

Children's Home 

250 State street. 
Ossinlhg: 

Christ Child Day Nursery 
87 Broadway. 



Oswego Orphan Asylum 

St. Francis Home 

Peekskill: 

St. Ann's Home 

(Mt. Florence.) 

St. Joseph's Home 

Peterboro: 

Madison County Children's Home. 



Plattsburg; 

Home for the Friendless of Northern New York 

9 Broad street. 
Port Jervis: 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum 

.56 Ball street. 
Port Richmond: 3 

Port Richmond Day Nursery 

66 Richmond avenue. 
Poughkeepsie: 

Poughkeepsie Orphan House and Home for the 
Friendless. 

South Hamilton and Franklin streets. 
Randolph: 

Western New York Society for the Protection of Home- 
less and Dependent Children. 
Red Hook: 

St. Margaret's Home 



Rensselaer: 

St. John's Orphan Asylum 

Rochester: 

Industrial School of Rochester 

133 Exchange street. 
Jewish Orphan Asylum Association of Western N. Y . 
670 St. Paul street. 



Private association . 



St. Benedict's Home < 



Private association 

Temple Israel Sisterhood 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

East Side House Settlement. 

City of Newburg 

Private corporation 

King's Daughters 



United Helpers 

Private association . 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. 



Private corporati- 



Sisters of Charity. 



Private association. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church . 



Care of children of working women . 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of poor Jewish children 

Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 
Care of children of working mothers. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of friendless children 

Care of children of working mothers. 



Care of orphan and destitute children 
Care of orphan and homeless children 



Care of homeless and destitute children . 



Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Notre Dame 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of the Holy Child . 



Care of orphan and destitute children 
Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of orphan and destitute children 



Care of orphan and destitute children , 
Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care and training of Jewish orphans. . . 
Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of orphans 

Care of orphan boys 

Care of orphan girls 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 

Girls. 

Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Boys- 
Girls. 



Care and training of destitute girls 
- Opened October 16, 1903. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



103 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN, 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 



'Part of New York city. 



1,502 
2, 22.5 
7,433 
5,000 
4,327 



■ Branch of Mission of the Immaculate Virgin, New York citv. 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



500 
104, 816 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. , 



1,184 
1,125 



512 

2,661 
2,020 
3, 000 



$4,377 


2,300 


6,534 


(') 


4, 935 


(-) 


5,000 


4,514 


2,019 


5,000 


4,022 



3,243 
1,000 



5,233 
3,944 



118, 377 
4,901 
3,817 
8,216 
720 
5,514 



4,120 
6,321 



11, 000 
21, 3.53 
3,775 



104 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

Saratoga Springs— Continued. 

Saratoga Home for Children 

13 Mitchell street. 
Schenectady: 

Children's Home 

1216 State street. 

Day Nursery 

418 Hamilton street. 
Sparkill: 

St Agnes Convent 

Spring Valley: 

Cherry Tree Home 

Stapleton, Staten Island: 2- 

Stapleton Day Nursery 

Syracuse: 

House of Providence 

Grand and Avery avenues. 



Tarrytown: 

Woody Crest 

Tivoli: 

Watts de Peyster Home and School for Girls . 



Troy: 

Day Home 

Seventh and Congress streets. 
Fairview Home for Friendless Children. 

(West Troy.) 
Humane Society Home 

79 Fourth street. 
St. Joseph's Home 



St. Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum . 

180 Eighth street. 
Troy Catholic Male Orphan Asylum. . . 

Hanover and Bedford streets. 

Troy Orphan Asylum 

Utica: 

House of the Good Shepherd 

1519 Sleeker street. 



lid Children. 
Watertown: 

Jefferson County Orphan Asylum 

66 Franklin street. 



West Seneca: 

St. John's Protectory 

I St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

White Plains: 

Westchester Temporary Home 



Yonkers: 

Leake and Watts Orphan H( 
Hawthorne avenue. 



NORTH CAROLINA. 
Asheville: 

Children's Home of Buncombe County 

Children's Home of Buncombe County (colored) . 
17 Charlotte street. 



Private corporation 



Children's Home Society of Schenec- 
tady. 
Private ; 



Dominican Sisters. . . 

Salvation Army 

Private association . . 
Sisters of Charity.... 
Private corporation . 

Sisters of Charity 

Private association . . 

Helen Miller Gould , 



Woman's Home Missionary Society 1 
the Methodist Episcopal Church. 



Private association . . 
Private corporation . 



Mohawk and Hudson River Humane 

Society. 
Sisters of St. Joseph 



Sisters of Charity 

Brothers of the Christian Schools . 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Deaconess Society 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



Brothers of the Holy Infancy 
Sisters of St. Joseph 



Private corporation 

Suffolk county 

Private corporation 



Care of indigent children . 



To provide a home for destitute chil- 
dren. 
Care of children of working mothers.. 

Care of destitute boys 

Care and training of orphans 

Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of orphan and dependent boys. . . 
Care of destitute children 



Care of abandoned, destitute, and or- 
phan girls. 
Care of children of working mothers. . 



Care of poor children 

Care of destitute and neglected girls . . 
Care of children of working mothers. . 



Care of homeless and neglected girls. . 

Care of destitute orphans and half or- 
phans. 
Care of orphan and destitute children 



Care of destitute girls 
Care of infants 



Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 

Boys. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 



Care of homeless children . 
Care of destitute children . 



Care of destitute Catholic children , 
Care of destitute orphan children. .. 



Care of destitute and truant children. 

Care of destitute children 

Care of orphan children 



Buncombe county Care of indigent white children. . . 

Buncombe county Care of indigent colored children . 



Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 

Boy s - 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Boys. 
Boys. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



I Presbyterian Synod of North Carolina. . Care and training of orphan children. 

Included in Dominican Convent of Our Ladv of the Rosarv, 329 East Sixty-third street, New York city. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



105 









NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 






j 


Number 
of paid 

ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1. 1904. 


Admi 


tted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 

.1 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


1 
Girls. 




19 


14 


5 


17 


g 


8 


17 


11 


6 


6 


• S832 


$435 


$2,018 


829. 


44 


23 


21 


32 


16 


16 


42 


22 


20 


7 


2,003 


231 


4,256 


830 


16 
290 


10 
290 











16 

347 


10 
347 


6 



2 

20 




V) 


130 


1,300 

0) 


831 


193 


193 





832 


31 


19 


12 


32 


14 


18 


32 


16 


16 


7 





456 


3,000 


833. 


■ g 


145 


(') 










9 


(3) 


(3) 


1 





100 


350 


834 


145 


68 


68 





137 


137 





7 




2.016 


9,595 


835. 


152 


86 


66 


95 


58 


37 


153 


85 


68 


19 


8,334 


2,993 


25,279 1836 


182 





182 


51 





51 


185 





185 


7 


9,996 


1,397 


16,118 837 


26 


13 


13 









17 
15 


9 
15 


8 



3 

4 






207 



1,000 1838 


13 


13 





,) ':839. 


60 





60 


8 





8 


55 





55 


7 








5,000. 840' 


120 
112 


63 


52 
49 








124 
118 


69 


55 
53 


8 
19 




8,562 






4, 629 1 841 


58 


28 


30 


15,465 '842 


10 


3 




379 


252 


127 


P) 


(«) 


(^) 


4 


1,000 





2,585 843 


205 


99 


106 


195 


112 


83 


199 


103 


96 


8 


14,380 


2,263 


18,090 844 


168 





168 


SO 





80 


217 





217 


4 


12, 337 


1,074 


13, 955 1 845 


194 


194 





11« 


118 





223 


223 





15 


23, 534 


1,669 


29,658 846 


251 


130 


121 


86 


48 


38 


253 


139 


114 


30 


18,985 


1,817 


23, 566 847 


34 


15 


19 


40 


23 


17 


50 


23 


27 


« 


4,319 


117 


4,367 848 


135 





135 


35 





35 


138 





138 


3 


15,000 


75 


15,000 849 


51 


30 


21 


58 


34 


24 




20 


19 


6 


5. 542 


881 


7, 070 8.50 


152 


77 


75 


193 


105 


, 88 


130 


75 


55 


21 


12,606 


1,924 


20, 685 851 


70 


70 





1, 085 


1,0^5 





85 


85 





20 





50 


19, 980 8-52 


11 


6 


5 


64 


17 


47 


29 


10 


19 


2 





580 


3,1,32 ;85a 


57 


32 


25 


82 


40 


42 


64 


38 


26 


10 


2,358 


1,.537 


7,879 18.54 

1 


64 


29 


35 


41 


21 


20 


74 


43 


31 





2,094 





3, 259 


855 


1 218 


530 
218 







-:: 


268 






452 
225 


452 
225 






5 



4,223 


P) 
677 


(■') 
15,438 


8.56 
857 


■170 


120 


50 


u. 


139 


50 


169 


127 


42 


23 


17,212 


623 


26, 099 


858 




26 


11 
41 


35 


21 


14 


37 


32 


5 


^ 




312 


4,000 


859 


119 


78 


26 


11 


15 


126 


76 


50 


.e 


(^) 





(■■') 


860 


29 
15 


11 


18 


22 


9 

{'■') 

18 


13 

(■■') 

18 


26 

{■■') 

138 


10 


16 
82 


2 
1 







(■') 


861 




862 


130 


52 


78 


1 

' 36 


56 


1 12 








10, 320 





Part of New York ■ 



106 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'; 



AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Speoific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



NORTH CAROLINA— Continued. 
Belmont: 

Sacred Heart Orphanage 

Charlotte: 

Alexander Home 

Charlotte Day Nursery ' 

Davidson and Phifer streets. 
St. Michael's Training and Industrial School. . . 

Mint and Hill streets. 
Thompson Orphanage and Training Institution 

Goldsboro: 

Odd Fellows' Orphan Home 

High Point: 

Friends' Orphanage 

Montreat: 

Hebron Industrial Home 

Nazareth: 

Boys' Industrial School and Orphanage 

Oxford: 

Colored Orphan Asylum 

Oxford Orphan Asylum 

Raleigh: 

Methodist Orphanage 

ThomasvUle: 

Thomasville Baptist Orphanage 

NORTH DAKOTA. 
Fargo: 

North Dakota Children's Home 

804 Tenth street. 
St. John's Orphanage 

OHIO. 
Akron: 

Mary Day Nursery 

East Buchtel avenue and South High st: 

Summit County Children's Home 

264 South Arlington street. 
Alliance: 

Fairmount Children's Home 

Ashland: 

Children's Home 

Ashtabula: 

Children's Home 

Athens: 

Athens County Children's Home 

Bellefontaine: 

Logan County Children's Home 

Berea: 

German Methodist Orphans' Home 

Birmingham: 

Light and Hope Orphanage 

Cadiz; 

Harrison County Children's Home 

Cambridge: 

Guernsey County Children's Home 

274 Highland avenue. 
Canal Dover: 

Tuscarawas Children's Home 

Carthage: 

Provincial Convent of the Good Shepherd 

Chillicothe: 

Ross County Children's Home 

Cincinnati: 

Boys' Home of Cincinnati 

526-532 Sycamore street. 

Children's Home of Cincinnati 

312 West Ninth street. 

Cincinnati Orphan Asylum 

(Mt. Auburn station.) 
German General Protestant Orphan Asylum . . . 

Jewish Foster Home .- 

Sixth street. 



Sisters of Mercy 

Presbyterian Church 

Private association 

St. Michael's Protestant Episcopal 

Church. 
Protestant Episcopal Diocese of North 

Carolina, of East Carolina, and of the 

District of Asheville. 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
North Carolina. 

Friends' Church 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private'association 

Masonic Grand Lodge of North Caro- 
lina. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South . . . 

Baptist State Convention of North 
Carolina. 

North Dakota Children's Home Society 
Presentation Nuns 

Private association 

Summit county 

Columbiana and Stark counties 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Athens county 

Logan county 

Central German Conference of the 
Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Private corpora;tion 

Harrison county 

Guernsey county 

Tuscarawas county 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Ross county 

Society of Our Lady of Pity 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

German General Protestant Orphan 

Society. 
United Jewish Charities of Cincinnati.. 

1 Not reported. 



Care and training of young girls 

Care of neglected children 

Care of children of working parents. . . 

Care and training of colored chDdren. 

Care of orphan and indigent children. 

Care of Odd Fellows' orphans 

Care and training of orphans 

Care and training of orphans and indi- 
gent children. 

Care of poor orphan boys 

Care of neglected and colored orphans 
Care of destitute orphan children 

Care of indigent orphans 

Care of indigent white orphans 

Care of homeless children 

Care of destitute children 



Care of children of workhig parents . . 

Care of homeless and neglected chil- 
dren under 16 years. 

Care of homeless and neglected chil- 
dren. 

To provide homes for orphan children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care and training of orphans and halt 
orphans. 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of homeless children 

Care of dependent children ■. . . 

Care of destitute children 

Reclamation of fallen girls and preser- 
vation of innocent children. 

Care of dependent children 

To provide for newsboys and other 

homeless and working boys. 
Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of homeless children 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Boys. 
Both 



Both 
Both 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



107 



NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On 


January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 








17 





17 


20 





20 


17 





17 





ffO 


$96 


»1, 600 


864 


11 


5 


6 


7 


4 


3 


'11 


5 


6 


3 








1,000 


865 


26 


14 


12 








.12 


g 


4 


2 





30 


700 


866 


130 


50 


80 


160 


55 


105 


142 


49 




■ 5 





100 


900 


867 


64 


24 


40 


28 


18 


10 


67 


24 


43 


' 





40 


4, .500 


868 


55 


25 


30 


11 


5 


■6 


66 


30 


, 36 


8 








4,500 


869 


41 


21 


20 


10 


6 


4 


30 


16 


14 


3 








1,500 


870 


. 


« 


12 


4 


1 


3 


24 


9 


15 








25 


842 


871 




33 





50 


50 





50 


50 











10 


2,000 


872 


99 


38. 


61 


108 


41 


67 


108 


41 


67 


12 


5,000 





0) 


873 


249 


125 


124 


74 


34 


40 


271 


130 


141 


25 


10, 000 





17,071 


874 


29 


14 


15 


6 


5 


1 


34 


19 


15 


3 








3, -500 


875 


260 


131 


129 


51 


16 


35 


» 


138 


125 


25 








15,000 


876 


23 


16 


7 


40 


21 


19 


13 


8 


5 


7 


950 


932 


5,500 


877 


65 


30 


35 


55 


29 


26 


55 


27 


28 


1 





900 


6,500 


878 


14 


6 










22 


12 


10 


2 





92 


2,000 


879 


85 


50 


35 


.64 


37 






50 


18 


9 




1,735 


6,571 


880 


119 




34 


70 


40 


30 


126 


86 


40 


22 




. 2,016 


13, 112 


881 


18 


12 


6 


18 


10 




36 


22 


14 





(') 





2,225 


882 




26 


13 


53 


33 


20 


43 


27 


16 


6 


2, 400 


3,622 


4,399 


883 


45 


35 


10 


31 


14 


17 


51 


33 


18 


8 




98 


5,216 


884 




19 


17 




19 


19 


48 


24 


24 


9 




524 


5,500 


885 


104 


49 


55 


11 


10 




100 


53 


47 


13 





700 


8,500 


886 


70 


40 


30 


12 


10 


2 


82 


50 


32 





1,000 


100 


1,400 


887 


30 


15 


15 


35 


19 


16 


30 


15 


15 


g 




912 


4 .542 888 


32 


10 


16 


12 


2 


10 


30 


14 


16 


9 







5,123 889 




53 


27 


61 




26 




61 


28 


4 





3, ,522 


8, 189 [ 890 


513 





513 


130 





130 


110 





110 







1,000 


35,000 891 




18 


20 


27 


19 


g 


33 


19 


14 


,, 







4,000 '892 


45 


45 







183 





61 


61 





5 





1.260 


3,600 893 


107 


54 


53 


1,190 


623 


567 


143 


• 71 


72 


22 








16,000 894 


100 


60 


40 


34 


18 


16 


94 


56 


38 


20 





1,812 


12,000 895 


142 


79 


63 


5 


4 


1 


125 


70 


55 


16 





391 


12,773 896 


32 


13 


19 


113 


53 


60 


40 


17 


H 


■^ 








3,000 


897 



108 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
ctiildren 
received. 



OHIO— Continued. 

Cincinnati— Continued. 

New Orphan Asylum for Colored Youth. 

Shillito and Emery streets. 
Protectory for Boys 

(Mt. Alverno.) 
Protestant Home for Working Boys 

753 Richmond street. 



St. Joseph's Infant Asylum . . 

(Norwood station.) 
St. Joseph's Orphan A.sylum. 
St. Luke's Boys' Home 

920 Findlay street. 



Circleville: 

Pickaway County Children's Home 

Cleveland: 

Children's Industrial Home and School. 
1747 Detroit street. 



Cleveland Christian Orphanage . 
1552 Broadway. 



Columbus: 

Children's Dav Home and Nurserv . 
231 North Ohio avenue. 



Children's Dav Home and Nursery 

266 Oak street. 
Franklin County Children's Home 

(Johnstown pike.) 
Hare Orphans' Home 

Woodland avenue and Long street. 
North Side Children's Home and Dav Nurserv 

68 Gill street. 



St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum 

Rose avenue and East Main street. 
Dayton : 

Montgomery County Children's Home 

528 South Summit street. 

St. Joseph's Orphan Home 

Defiance: 

Defiance County Children's Home 



Home of Delaware , 



Findlay: 

Findlay Orphanage and Children's Industrial Home. 
Flatrock: 

Ebenezer Orphan Home ' 

'Includes St. Joseph's Maternity Hospital. 



Private corporation 

Brothers of St. Francis . . . . . 

Private corporation 

St. Aloysius Orphan Societj 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 



Sisters of Charity . . 
Episcopal Church . 



Salvation Army . 



Pickaway county 

Children's Add Society of Cleveland. 



Private association 

Private corporation 

Society of the Holy Family 

Private corporation 

Independent Order B'nai B'rith 

Private corporation 

Cleveland Humane Society 

Sisters of Charity > 

Ladies of the Sacred Heart 

Sisters of Charity 



Deaconess Home of the Methodist 
Episcopal Church. 



Franklin county 

Trustees of Jacob Haie endowment . . . 
Golden Rule Circle, King's Daughters. 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of St. Francis 



Montgomery county 

Sisters of the Most Precious Blood. 
Defiance county 



Preble county . 



Private corporation 



Evangelical Association 

- Conducts 5 day nurseries. 



Care of orphan and abandoned children 

Care of destitute and neglected Catho- 
lic boys. 
Care of homeless working boys 



Care of half orphans 

Care of infants and their mothers . 



Care of orphan and destitute children 
To provide Christian homes for home- 
less and working boys. 
Care of children of working parents . . 



Both 

Boys. 

Boys. 

Both 

Both 

Both 

Both 
Boys. 



Care of destitute children . 



Care of orphan and homeless children 
Care of children of working mothers . 



Care of homeless and orphan children. 
Care of indigent infant orphans 



Care of Jewish orphans and half or- 
phans. 
Care of orphan and friendless children. 



Care of abandoned waifs . 
Care of destitute girls 



Care of children of working mothers . 

Care of children of working women . . . 
Care of children of working mothers. . 
Care of homeless children 



for 

Care of destitute and homeless boys 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of destitute children 

Care of German Catholic orphans 

Care of homeless children 

Care of dependent children 



Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



Both. 

Both. 
Both . 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both . 



Care of orphan and'destitute children 
Care of indigent orphans. 



2 Included in St. Ann's Lying-in Hcspital. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESERIES— Continued. 



109 



NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

plo^ees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Kemaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




45 


20 


25 


20 


6 


14 


44 


24 


20 


■ g 


$0 


$0 


83, 500 


898 


187 


187 





63 


63 





187 


187 











3,600 


12,000 


899 


12 


12 





13 


13 





12 


12 





3 





1,200 


2,000 


900 


207 


106 


101 


20 


12 


8 


194 


102 


92 


"25 





300 


24,454 


901 


25 


15 


10 


47 


28 


19 


28 


16 


12 








2,700 


3,188 


902 


■ 87 


40 


. 47 


174 


86 


88 


90 


44 


46 


14 





14,468 


125,236 


903 


348 
6 


186 
6 


162 



64 
15 


15 


28 



287 
7 


154 

7 


133 



6 

1 






1,972 
704 


20, 164 
1,640 


904 
905 


25 


10 


15 








75 


40 


35 


1 





120 


150 


906 


40 
56 


34 


19 

22 


20 
163 


7 


13 




20 




5 






4,210 


907 


107 


56 


57 


38 


19 


10 





2. 000 


10, 500 


908 


56 


36 


20 


68 


40 


28 


65 


41 


24 


5 





954 


2,826 


909 


150 


70 


80 








151 


69 


82 


18 





2,025 


9,386 


910 




45 


43 


218 


116 


102 


82 


45 


37 


13 





1,959 


16,027 


911 


56 


22 


34 


86 


36 


50 


63 


25 


38 


5 





2,080 


4,278 


912 


18 


1» 


7 


24 


10 


14 


25 


15 


10 


6 








3,000 


913 


500 


284 


216 


95 


60 


35 


500 


290 


210 


54 








78,000 


914 


60 


30 


30 


143 


74 


69 


56 


30 


26 


8 





1,710 


3,196 


915 


9 


4 


5 


. 52 


28 


24 


8 


3 


5 


4 





753 


2,618 


916 


106 


61 


45 


.527 


277 


250 


106 


69 


37 


6 





(') 


{') 


917 


237 





237 


158 





158 


241 





241 


'2 





1,845 


16,136 


918 


260 


260 





165 


165 





298 


298 





9 





2,510 


11, 900 


919 


12 


{') 


(•*) 








15 


g 


7 


3 





(■*) 


(*) 


920 








28 


14 


14 


2 







762 


921 


47 


20 


27 








57 


27 


30 


5 





381 


1,574 


922 


103 
30 


19 


35 


84 


39 


45 


109 


71 




20 







13, 777 


923 


11 


25 


13 


12 


30 


17 


13 


4 





2, 392 


924 


9 


4 


5 


13 


6 


7 


6 


2 


4 


2 





250 


500 


925 


30 


30 


» 


6 


6 





23 


23 














5,436 


926 


277 


143 


134 


101 


51 


50 


286 


139 


147 


2 





3, 580 


10,000 


927 


1 • 96 


58 


38 


117 


67 


50 


79 


44 


35 


14 







12,000 


928 


79 


41 




7 


4 




85 


44 


41 








900 


4, 527 


929 


28 


21 


^ 


13 


7 


6 


14 


g 


6 


5 




1,060 


2,000 


930 


47 


25 


22 


31 


19 


12 


34 


25 


9 


7 


3, 194 


111 


*, 236 


931 


30 


20 


10 




6 


3 


31 


24 


7 


g 







3,877 


932 




10 


11 


26 


15 


10 




15 


12 


6 


1,500 


578 


2,224 


933 


112 


67 


45 


14 


5 


9 


126 


72 


54 


21 





870 


11,000 


934 



' Opened .January 20, 1904. 



110 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



\'AMB AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by — 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 

when 

fouftd- 

ed. 



OHIO— Continued. 
Galllpolis: 

Gallia County Children's Home 

Georgetown: 

Brown County Children's Home 

Glendale: 

Bethany Home 

Greenville: 

Darke County Children's Home 

Hamilton: 

Children's Home 

South D and Garden streets. 
Hillsboro; 

Highland County Children's Home 

Iron ton : 

Lawrence County Children's Home 

Lancaster: 

Fairfield County Children's Home 

Lebanon: 

Warren County Orphan Asylum and Children's Home 
Lima: 

Allen County Children's Home 

Logan: 

Hocking County Children's Home 

London: 

Madison County Children's Home 

Louisville: 

St. Louis Orphan Asylum 

McArthur: 

Vinton County Children's Home 

Malta: 

Morgan County Children's Home 

Mansfield: 

Richland County Children's Home 

Marietta: 

Washington County Children's Home 

Marion: 

Marion County Children's Home 

Marysville: 

Union County Children's Home 

Massillon: 

Charity Botch School 

Maumee: 

Lucas County Children's Home 

Millersburg: 

Holmes County Children's Home 

Minster: 

St. Mary's Institute ., 

Mt. Ephraim: 

Temporary Children's Home 

Mt! Vernon : 

Home for Friendless Children 

New Lexington: 

Perry County Children's Home 

New Riegel: 

St. Mary's Orphan Home 

Newark: 

Licking County Children's Home 

NoTwalk: 

Children's Home 

Oberlin: 

Lorain County Children's Home 

Pomeroy : 

Meigs County Children's Home 

Portsmouth: 

Scioto County Children's Home 

dusky: 

Erie County Children's Home 

ley: 

Shelby County Children's Home 

Springfield: 

Clark County Children's Home 

Ohio Pythian Home 

Tacoma: 

Belmont County Children's Home 



Gallia county 

Brown county 

Community of the Transfiguration 

Darke county 

Children's Home Association of Ham- 
ilton. 

Private corporation 

Lawrence county 

Fairfield county 

Private corporation 

Allen county 

Hocking county 

Madison county 

Sisters of Charity 

Vinton county 

Morgan county 

Richland county 

Washington county ,. . 

Marion county 

Union county 

Trustees of the Mrs. Charity Rotch 
endowment. 

Lucas county 

Holmes county 

Sisters of the Precious Blood 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Perry county 

Sisters of the Precious Blood 

Licking county 

Children's Home Society 

Lorain county 

Meigs county 

Scioto county 

Erie county 

Shelby county 

Clark county 

Knights of Pythias of Oliio 

Belmont county 

1 Not reported. 



Care of homeless children , 

Care of needy and dependent children. 

Care find training of needy girls 

Care of homeless children 

Care of homeless children , 

Care of dependent and neglected chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan and neglected children. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of destitute orphan boys 

Care of dependent children under 16 
years. 

Care of orphan and indigent children 
under 16 years. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of indigent children under 16 
years. 

Care of orphan, abandoned, and desti- 
tute children. 

Care of indigent children under 16 
years. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan, destitute, and neglect- 
ed children. 

Care of dependent children 

Care and training of orphan, destitute, 
and homeless girls. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of friendless children 

Care of dependent children 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of dependent children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and neg- 
lected children. 

Care of homeless children 

Care of orphans of the Pythian order . 

Care of indigent children 



Both. 
Both. 
Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both . 



Both. 
Both. 



Both. 

Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



Ill 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



subsidy 

from public 

funds. 



Income , Total cost 
from pay ] of maini 
inmates, tenance, 



$4,449 
3,441 
5,000 
7,000 

2,000 
4,052 



7,279 


944 


1,100 


945 


4,248 


946 


6,600 


947 


2,400_ 


948 


3,780 


949 


6,639 


950 


5,544 


951 


6,884 


952 


2,153 


953 


2,500 


954 


12,314 


955 


1,200 


956 


1,300 


957 


772 


958 


2,706 


959 


1,2.56 


960 


3,200 


961 


7,878 


962 


510 


963 



4,174 
5,300 



19,015 



112 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 
wlien 
found- 
ed. 



OHIO— Continued. 
Tiffin; 

National Orphans' Home 

Toledo: 

Lutheran Orplians' Home ..■ 

Seaman street. 

Old Adams Street Day Nursery 

572 Ontario street. 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum 

•2327 Cherry street. 

Toledo Boys' Home 

20 Eleventh street. 

Toledo Day Nursery 

11 Twelfth street. 
Troy: 

Miami County Children's Home 

Urbana: 

Champaign County Children' s Home 

Warren: 

Trumbull County Children's Home 

Washington Court House: 

Fayette County ChDdren's Home 

Waverly: 

Pike County Cliildren's Home 

West Liberty: 

Mennonite Orphans' Home 

West Union: 

Wilson Children's Home 

Wilmington: 

Clinton County Children's Home 

Woodsfield: 

Monroe County Children's Home 

Wooster: 

Wayne County Children's Home 

Xenia: 

Greene County Children's Home 

Ohio Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans' Home 

Youngstown: 

Mahoning County Children's Home , 

Zanesville: 

John Mclntire Children's Home 

OKLAHOMA. 
Guthrie: 

Children's Receiving Home 

Oklahoma City: 

Oklahoma Baptist Orphan.s' Home 

Oklahoma Orphanage 

OREGON. 
Beaverton: 

St. Mary's Home 

Parkplace: 

St. Agnes Baby Home 

Portland: 

Baby Home 

(Waverly Addition. ) 

Children's Home , 

887 Corbett street. 
St. Paul: 

St. Mary's Home , 

PENNSYLVANIA. 
Allegheny: 

First Allegheny Day Nursery and Temporary Home. 
3035 Perrys\'ille avenue. 

Home for Colored Children 

Termon avenue. 
J. M. Gusky Orphanage and Home 

3605 Perrysville avenue. 
Pittsburg and Allegheny Home for tlie Friendless . . 

423 Washington street. 
Protestant Home for Boys 

203 Anderson street. 
Protestant Orphan Asylum of Pittsburg and Allegheny 

Ridge and Grant 



Junior Order of United American Me- 
chanics. 

Evangelical Lutheran Church 

Old Adams Street City Mission 

Sisters of Charity 

King's Daughters 

Private association 

Miami county 

Champaign county 

Trumbull county 

Fayette county 

Pike county 

Mennonite Church 

Adams county commissioners as trus- 
tees of estate of Geo. G. Wilson. 

Clinton county 

Monroe county 

Wayne county 

Greene county 

State of Ohio 

Mahoning county 

Private corporation 

Children's Home Society 

Oklahoma Baptist State Convention . . 
Holiness Association of Texas 

Sisters of the Most Precious Blood 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation '. 

Ladies Relief Society 

Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and 
Mary. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation . .■ 

Private corporation 

> Not reported. 



Care of orphans of members of the 
order. 

Care of orphan and destitute children. 

Care of children of working parents . . 

Care of orphan children 

Care of homeless boys 

Care of children of working mothers . 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of orphan and neglected children 

Care of homeless and destitute children 

Care of abandoned and destitute chil- 
dren. 

Care of homeless children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of dependent children 

Care of indigent children 

Care of homeless children 

Care of soldiers' and sailors' orphan 
children. 

Care of dependent children 

Care of destitute children 



Care of dependent children under 15 
years. 

Care of needy and orphan children. . . 
Care of orphan and destitute children. 



Care of orphan and abandoned boys. . 
Care of indigent children under 6 years 



Temporary care of children under 10 
years of age whose mothers are em- 
ployed. 

Care of homeless, orphan, destitute, 
and neglected colored children. 

Care of orphan and half orphan chil- 
dren. 

Care of homeless children 



Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Boys.- 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 



Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 



Both. 
Both. 



Boys. 
Both. 



Both. 
Girls. 



To provide a home for working boys. 
Care of orphan children 



Both. 
Boys. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



113 



NUMBER OP CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 
Total. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



$17,500 
3.500 



6, .506 
3,463 



5, 800 . 
2,456 



6,C 
180, 999 



600 3, 000 

. 000 4, 592 



7,413 
8,000 
20, 175 



1004 
1005 



30952—05 8 



114 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received, 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



1010 
1011 
1012 
1013 
1014 

1015 
1016 
1017 

1018 
1019 
1020 

1021 
1022 
1023 
1024 

1025 
1026 



PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 



Allegheny— Continued. 



School Sisters of Notre Dame. 



United Presbyterian Orphans' Home 

West Jefferson and Monterey streets. 
Bradford: 

Beacon Light Mission , 



Butler: 

St. Paul's Orphan Home . . 
Chambersburg: 

Children's Orphan Home. 



Private association 

Reformed Church in the United States. 



Children's Aid Society of Franklin 
County. 



Soldiers' Orphan School . 



Crothers: 

Washington County Children's Home 

Rural Free Delivery 60. 
Easton: 

Easton Home for Friendless Children 

Washington and Fifteenth streets 



State of Pennsylvania. 
Washington county . . . 
Private corporation . . . 



Emsworth: 

Holy Family Orphan Asylum 
Erie: 

St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum. 
East Third street. 



Brothers of the Christian Schools 

Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth. 
Sisters of St. Joseph 



Harrisburg: 

Children's Industrial Home 

Nineteenth and Savatara streets. 



Westmoreland Children's Aid Society. 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 



Huntingdon: 

Home for Orphan and Friendless Children. 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of Mercy 



Jenkintown: 

Jenkintown Day Nursery 

Water and Thomas streets. 



Children's Aid Society . 
Private association 



State of Pennsylvs 



Lancaster: 

Home for Friendless Children of the City and County 
of Lancaster. 
Langhorne: 

Foulke and Long Institute for Orphan Girls 

(Eden.) 
Loysville: 

Tressler Orphans' Home , 



Sisters of the ] 



, Sacrament . 



Oakdale: 

Boys' Industrial Home of Western Pennsylvania. 
Philadelphia: 

Baldwin Day Nursery 

152 West Lehigh avenue. 



fty-eighth and Thomas streets. 



Odd Fellows Home Association of West- 
ern Pennsylvania. 

Trustees of the estate of George Frey. . 

Brothers of Our Lady of Lourdes 

Private association 

Private association 

Baptist Church 

ncludes Children's Aid Society Hospital. 



Care of orphan children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of orphan, half orphan, and other 
friendless children. 

Care of neglected and homeless chil- 
dren. 

Care of orphan children 

Care of friendless, homeless, and indi- 
gent children. 

Care of children of soldiers of Civil and 
Spanish-American wars. 

Care of orphan and deserted children.. 
Care of friendless children 

Care of orphan boys 

Care and training of orphan children.. 
Care of helpless children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute children 

Care and education of orphan and des- 
titute girls. 

Temporary care of destitute children . . 

Care of orphan, neglected, and aban- 
doned children. 

Care of orphan and homeless girls 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of orphan and other destitute 
children. 

Care of orphan and destitute children 
of deceased and disabled soldiers 
and sailors. 

Care of homeless children 

Care and training of orphan girls 

Care and training of destitute children. 

Care of orphan and other needy chil- 
dren. 

Care and training of colored and Indian 
children. 

Care of orphan children of Odd Fel- 
lows. 

Care of poor and destitute orphan chil- 
dren. 

To provide for homeless boys 

Care of homeless and neglected boys. . . 
Care of children of working parents... 
Care of orphans under 16 years 



Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 



Both.... 


n 


Both.... 


1885 


Boys 


1888 


Both.... 


1900 


Both.... 


1865 


Both.... 


1885 


Both.... 


1876 


Girls.... 


1902 


Both.... 


1880 


Both.... 


1840 


Girls.... 


1898 


Both .... 


1903 


Both.... 


1881 


Both.... 


1866 



Both.... 


1868 


Both.... 


1883 


Both.... 


1892 


Both.... 


1872 


Both.... 


1806 


Boys.... 


1900 


Boys.... 


1900 



1867 
1884 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOiMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



115 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




290 


170 


120 


135 


70 


65 


295 


171 


124 





SO 


$3,204 


825,669 


1006 


27 


16 


11 


2 


1 


1 


23. 


12 


11 


3 





491 


1,343 


1007 


86 


45 


41 


22 


14 


« 


.53 


33' 


20 


10 





2,410 


5,910 


1008 


17 


11 


6 


12 


7 


5 


18 


10 


8 





108 


423 


1,200 


1009 


72 


34 


38 


24 


11 


13 


71 


32 


39 


11 





1,285 


12,000 


1010 


12 


10 


2 


11 


8 


3 


14 


11 


3 


4 


1 2, .500 


666 


3,527 


1011 


348 
52 


206 
30 


142 
22 


60 


38 
30 


22 
29 


307 

52 


181 
30 


126 

22 


40 
5 








38, 109 


1012 





1013 


39 


25 


14 


31 


15 


16 


39 


29 


10 


5 


792 


1,194 


1014 


305 


305 





61 


61 





296 


296 





20 





° 


36, 000 


1015 


102 


60 


42 


43 


20 


23 


106 


50 


56 


15 


2,800 


875 


8,000 


1016 


197 


110 


• 87 


74 


40 


34 


214 


108 


106 





108 


1,876 


10, 202 


1017 


53 


30 


23 


86 


57 


29 


40 


25 


15 


7 


2,750 


2,414 


6, 356 


1018 


76 


55 


21 


42 


28 


14 


64 


40 


24 


8 


m 


2,486 


6,157 


1019 


75 





75 


20 





20 


75 





75 


« 


500 





4,500 


1020 


12^ 


7 


5 


15 


11 


4 


23 


16 


7 


3 


1,500 


118 


1,805 


1021 


765 


390 


375 


544' 


283 


261 


827 


402 


425 


6 





6, 800 


35,000 


1022 


17 





17 


24 





24 


24 





24 


2 


(-) 


1,000 


1,200 


1023 


8 


4 


4 








19 


10 


9 








45 





1024 
1025 


38 


19 


19 


5 


2 


3 


41 


20 


21 


7 


4,500 


308 


206 


102 


50 


27 


23 


275 


182 


93 


35 







45,000 
10, 206 


1026 


59 


40 


19 


34 


20 


14 


79 


54 


25 


15 







1027 


39 





39 


31 





31 







63 


16 





2,784 




1028 


186 


95 


91 


25 


15 


10 


187 


99 


88 


24 





1,000 


14,000 


1029 


92 


49 


43 


15 


10 


5 


86 


49 


37 


5 








4,000 


1030 


161 


47 


114 


29 


16 


13 


155 


45 


110 


3 








14, 086 


1031 


69 


43 


26 


10 


4 


6 


69 


41 


28 


7 








6,000 


1032 


30 


12 


18 


3 


2 


1 


25 


9 


16 


5 








3,564 


1033 


19 


19 





19 


19 





17 


n 





3 








3,000 


1034 


50 


50 





130 


130 





50 


50 





8 


1,000 


1,000 


6,000 


1035 


35 


15 


20 









52 


22 


30 


4 





506 


2,215 


1036 


100 


43 


57 


23 


10 


18 


104 


42 


62 


15 








10, 716 


1037 



116 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— OEPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Specific object of institution. 


Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 

when 
found- 
ed. 


1038 


PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 

Philadelphia— Continued. 

Bethesda Children's Christian Home 


Private association 


Care of destitute and homeless children 

Care of female orphans of Protestant 

Episcopal clergymen. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 


Both.... 

Girls.... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Boys.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 

Boys.... 
Boys — 


1859 

1863 
lb97 

1903 
1856 
1863 
1902 
1897 
1846 
1881 
1848 
1900 
1889 
1903 
1855 
1898 
1883 
1882 
1886 
1896 
1900 

1855 
1880 
1866 
1879 
1885 
1880 
1854 

1815 
1873 
1878 
1900 
1882 

1829 
1890 




Willow Grove and Stenton avenues (Chest- 
nut Hill). 


St. Stephen's Protestant Episcopal 

Church. 
Sisters of Charity 


1040 


Sixty-third and Market streets. 
Cathedral Dav Nursery 




Twentieth and Summer streets. 


Sisters of St Joseph 




1720 Race street. 




Care of half orphan, homeless, and des- 
titute children. 
Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of children of working mothers . . 




981 North Fifth street. 






Baltimore avenue and Fifty-eighth street. 


Private association 




2218 Lombard street. 






4058 Ridge avenue. 






1223 South Forty-seventh street. 


Foster Home Association of Philadel- 
phia. 




Twenty-fourth and Poplar streets. 


Care of orphan, neglected, and desti- 
tute children. 

Care and education of indigent orphan 
boys. 

Care of orphan and half orphan chil- 
dren under 3 years. 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care and training of destitute colored 

children. 
Care of Jewi.sh orphan children 

Care and training of orphans of Odd 
Fellows. 


1049 


4011 Aspen street. 


Board of Directors of City Trusts 

Trustees of Mrs. Daniel Haddock en- 
dowment. 


1050 


Girard and Corinthian avenues. 




806 Pine street. 


1052 


Nineteenth and Ellsworth streets. 


Hebrew Ladies Aid Society 




719 North Fifth street. 






Fifty-fourth and Berks streets. 




1055 


Tenth and Bainbridge streets. 
Home for Orphans of Odd Fellows 


Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Pennsylvania. 




Twentieth and Ontario streets. 
Home of the Merciful Saviour for Crippled Children . 
4400 Baltimore avenue. 






Care of colored crippled children 

Care of destitute and homeless colored 

children. 
Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of dependent children 


1058 


613 North Forty-third street. 
House of the Holy Child 


Protestant Episcopal Church 




627 North Forty-third street. 


Missionary Sisters of St. Francis 




744 South Tenth street. 




302 North Sixteenth street. 

Jewish Foster Home and Orphan Asylum, The 

Church lane (Germantown). 


Federation of Jewish Charities of Phil- 
adelphia. 




Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of orphan and destitute white or 

Indian children. 
Care of destitute orphan children 

Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of children of working mothers... 

Care of friendless children 




2121-2123 East Dauphin street. 




1064 


324 South Eleventh street. 


Methodist Episcopal churches of Phil- 
adelphia. 




Monument avenue. 




(Germantown.) 




1067 


1008 North Fifth street. 
Northern Home for Friendless Children and Associ- 
ated Institute for Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans. 

Twenty-third and Brown streets. 
Orphan Society of Philadelphia 

Sixty-fourth street and Lansdown avenue. 


State of Pennsvlvania 












Care of infants too young for other 
homes. 

Care of orphan and half orphan chil- 
dren. 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of daughters of employees dying 
in the service of the Pennsylvania 
Railroad Company. 


1070 


4618 Westminster avenue. 


Presbyterian Church of Pennsylvania.. 


Fifty-eighth street and Kingressing avenue. 
Rodman Street Day Nursery 

715 Rodman street. 
St. John's Orphanage 

1718-1722 Rittenhouse street. 

St. John's Orphan Asylum 

Forty-ninth street and Wyalusing avenue. 
St. Joseph's House for Homeless Industrious Boys... 

727-735 Pine street. 


1072 
1073 


Trustees of estate of J. EdgarThomson. 




Care and training of destitute boys . . . . 







-Opened October 13, 1903. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



117 



NUMBER OF CHILDREN. 


Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaini 


ig December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


funds. 








147 


72 


75 


67 


40 


27 


145 


68 


77 


20 


W 


$4,403 


811,103 


1038 


70 





70 


7 





7 


70 





70^ 


15 








15,000 


1039 


97 
249 


56 



41 
249 








, 263 
257 


140 



123 
257 


6 
3 






0) 




14, 058 


1040 


207 





207 


1041 


21 


11 


10 


43 


28 


15 


24 


12 


12 


2 





(-) 


(-) 


1042 


66 





66 


35 





35 


88 





88 


14 





436 


16,406 


1043 


189 



82 


91 
5 
34 


98 

48 








113 
14 


63 
11 
34 


50 
48 


5 
- 







416 
73 
287 


2,139 

780 

1,897 


1044 








1045 








1046 


80 


36 


44 


34 


16 


18 


81 


40 


41 


14 





1,942 


11, 156 


1047 


28 


18 


10 


43 


29 


14 


28 


21 


7 


5 


2,000 


1,285 


3,886 


1048 


1,486 


1,486 





245 


245 





1,489 


1, 489 





388 








494,523 


1049 


8 


5 


3 


5 


2 


3 


10 


5 


5 


6 








5,000 


1050 


22 
39 


10 
29 


4 
12 
10 








74 
28 
39 


30 

12 
25 


44 
16 
14 


5 
3 
5 






400 



3,115 
10, 690 


1051 








1052: 


12 


6 


6 


10.53: 


58 


47 


11 


18 


11 


7 


61 


49 


12 


14 







10,382 


1054 


53 


34 


19 


13 


9 


4 


58 


40 


18 


7 







7,139 


1055 


70 


22 


48 


' i 


2 


2 


50 


17 


33 


20 




250 


15,355 


1066 


24 


12 


12 


11 


.6 


5 


24 


14 


10 


6 




127 


4,612 


1057 


21 


6 


15 


23 


8 


15 


23 


8 


15 


6 




970 


3,674 


1058 


125 


45 


80 








282 


143 


139 












lp59 
1060, 


15 


9 


6 








25 


15 


10 







390 


1,207 


121 


73 


48 


27 


19 


8 


120 


68 


52 


20 








24, 000 


1061- 


fi) 


-(1) 

8 


0) 
32 








(1) 


0) 


0) 
34 


3 





■^69 


1 108 


1062- 


40 


6 


2 


4 


43 


11 





100 


8,000 


1063' 


94 


47 


47 


35 


23 


12 


117 


61 


56 


20 








18, 000 


1064 


16 


„ 


g 








50 


40 


10 


.-, 


^ 





1 000 


1065 




41 


48 











30 




5 






350 


3,000 
20, 149 


1066; 

loeT 


227 


155 


72 


g 


5 


3 


235 


160 


75 


23 




75 






5 


4 


1 




30 


42 


10 








12, 000 


1068 


48 


27 


21 


53 


25 


28 


48 


27 


21 


20 


2,000 


1,445 


6,800 


1069 


104 


44 


60 


9 


4 


5 


95 


40 


55 


16 








13,938 


1070 


•n 


14 


7 








18 


11 


_ 


,-, 





364 



414 

7, 313 


1071 
1072, 


10 





10 







B 


13 





13 


6 





523 


523 





264 


264 





564 


.564 





10 








37, 097 


1073 


125 


125 





62 


62 





120 


120 





10 








15,000 


1074 



3 Opened July, 1903. 



118 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Specific object of institution. 


Sex of 
children 
received. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


n-5 


PENNSYtVANIA— Continued. 
Philadelphia— Continued. 






Girls.... 
Girls.... 

Both 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 

Boys 

Boys.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 
Girls.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 
Girls.... 
Both.... 
Both.... 

Both.... 

Both.... 
Boys.... 


1798 
1876 
1858 
1856 
1822 
1849 
1851 

1878 
1898 
1885 

1902 
1894 
1895 
1873 

1872 
1902 

1872 
1874 

1875 

1883 
1898 

1896 
1864 
1884 
1888 

1862 

1897 
1898 


OVfi 


700 Spruce street. 
St Mary Magdalen de Fazzi'sOrphanage 


Missionary Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of Charity 


Care and training of Italian orphan 
girls. 


077 


730 Montrose street. 
St. Vincent's Home 


078 


Twentieth and Race streets 




Care of German Catholic orphans 

Care of colored orphan childreTi 

Care of destitute white children be- 
tween 3 and 12 years. 

Care of destitute white children be- 
tween 4 and 16 years. 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

Care of children of working mothers. . . 

To provide a temporary shelter for 
young children. 

Care of neglected and abused children. 

Care and training of crippled children. 

Care of homeless boys partially self- 
supporting. 

Care of homeless and orphan boys 


079 


Vincent and Milner streets (Tacony). 




080 


Forty-fourth and Wallace streets. 
Southern Home for Destitute Children 




081 


1700 South Broad street. 
Western Home for Poor Children 




08'' 


Forty-first and Baring streets (West Phila- 
delphia). 
Willing Day Nursery .. . 






425-427 Pine street. 


Women's Union Missionary Society 

Federation of Jewish Charities 


084 


1838 Lombard street. 
Young Women's Union Nursery and Home 


085 


422^28 Bainbridge street. 
Pittsburg: 


Allegheny County Association for the 
Prevention of Cruelty to Children 
and Aged Persons. 




178 Washington avenue. 




Margaretta and Beatty streets. 


Pittsburg Newsboys' Association 

Brothers of Our Lady of Lourdes 


088 


Forbes and Sixth avenues. 
St Joseph's Protectory 




Vine street. 
St. Michael's Roman Catholic German Orphanage... 
55 Pius street. 
Pottsville: 




Pottsville Benevolent Association 

United Brethren Church 


Care of destitute, neglected, and friend- 
less children. 

Care and training of indigent and neg- 
lected children. 

Care of orphans and friendless children . 


091 


Quincy: 

Quincy United Brethren Orphanage and Home 

Reading: 

Home for Friendless Children 


092 


City of Reading 




Center avenue and Springfield street. 




094 


1026 Franklin street. 
Redington: 

William T Carter Junior Republic 


Mrs. William T. Carter 


Care and training of homeless juvenile 
incorrigibles. 

Care of homeless, convalescent, and 
crippled children. 

Care and training of children of sol- 
diers and sailors of the Civil and 
Spanish-American wars. 


095 


Rosemont: 
• Hospital of the Good Shepherd 


Memorial Church of the Good Shep- 
herd. 

State of Pennsylvania 

Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of 
Mary. 

South Bethlehem Children's Home 
Society. 


096 
097 


Scotland: 

Pennsylvania Soldiers' Orphan Industrial School 

Scran ton: 




1425 Jackson street. 
South Bethlehem: 




099 




Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care and education of orphans of Odd 
Fellows. 


100 
101 


Sunbury: 

Odd Fellov?s' Orphans' Home of Central Pennsylva- 

Topton: 


Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Pennsylvania. 


102 


Villamaria: 

Home of the Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary . . . 
WayDe.sburg: 


Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary . . 


Care and education of needy girls 

Care and training of homeless children. 


104 


West Liberty: 


United German Evangelical Protes- 
tant churches of Pittsburg and vi- 
cinity. 


105 


(Castle Shannon.) 
Wilkesbarre: 




106 


335 South Franklin street. 
Wniiamsburg: 

Blair County Industrial Training Home 

Williamsport: 


Blair county 


Care of destitute and orphan children . 
Care of destitute and delinquent boys. . 


107 


City Mission of Williamsport 




617 East Third street. 





Not reported. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUESERIES— Continued. 



119 



NUMBBE OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 

from public 
funds. 



Income 
from pay 



1,924 
1,400 




1,260 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



1,443 
118 



{') 


1075 


$2,288 


1076 


17, 950 


1077 


14, 659 


1078 


8,800 


1079 


9, 785 


1080 


5, 762 


1081 



5,000 
5,000 
3,450 
2,434 



3,250 
2,261 



120 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN' 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
chiJdren 
received. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



PENN SYI^VANIA— Continued. 

Williamsport— Continued. 

Girls' Training School 

327 East Third street. 
Womelsdorf: 

Bethany Orphans' Home '. 

York: 

Children's Home 

Zelienople: 

Orphans' Home and Orphans' Farm School 

RHODE ISLAND. 
Barrington: 

St. Andrew's Industrial School 

Bristol: 

Bristol Home for Destitute Children 

Newport: 

Home for Friendless Children 

Mary and School streets. 
Pawtncket: 

Pawtucket Day Nursery 

47 Capitol street. 
Providence: 

Grace Memorial Home 

133 Delaine street. 

Hope Day Nursery 

167 Chestnut street. 

Providence Children's Friend Society 

23 Tobey street. 

Providence Shelter for Colored Children 

20 Olive street. 

Rhode Island Catholic Orphan Asylum 

473 Prairie avenue. 

Rhode Island Home for Working Boys 

42 Park street. 
Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Crueltv 
to Children. 

98 Doyle avenue. 

St. Marv's Orphanage 

128 Fifth street (East Providence) . 

St. Vincent de Paul's Infant Asylum 

Regent avenue. 
State Home and School 

Woonsocket: 

Woon.socket Day Nursery and Children's Home 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 
Charleston: 

Church Home Orphanage 

229 Ashley avenue. 

City Orphan Asylum 

120 Queen street. 

Jenkins' Orphanage 

20 Franklin street. 
Clinton: 

Thornwell Orphanage 

Columbia: 

Epworth Orphanage 

Industrial Home 

Greenwood: 

Connie Maxwell Orphanage 

Hickory: 

Associate Reformed Presbyterian Orphanage 

Mt. Pleasant: 

Mt. Pleasant Home 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 
Beresford: 

Bethesda Orphanage 

Sioux Falls: 

South Dakota Children's Home 

TENNESSEE. 
Chattanooga: 

Children's Refuge 

115 West Terrace street. 

Steele Home 

15 Straight street. 

Vine Street Orphans' Home 

240 Vine street. 



Private corporation 

Reformed Church 

Private corporation 

Institution of Protestant Deaconesses . 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Churches of Bristol 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Providence Day Nursery Association . 

Private association 

Private corporation _. 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Rhode 

Island. 
Sisters of Divine Providence 

State of Rhode Island 

Private association 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Mercy 

Orphan Aid Society 

Presbyterian Synod 

Methodist Church of South Carolina. . 
Private corporation 

State Baptist Convention of South 
Carolina. 

Associate Reformed Presbyterian 
Church. 

Society of Friends 



Care of homeless girls 

Care of homeless children 

Care of destitute children 

Care of destitute and friendless or- 
phans. 

Care and training of imperiled boys . . . 
Careoffriendlessand destitute children 
Care of friendless and destitute (Children 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of children of working mothers . . 
e>are of children of working inothers . . 
Tosupport and educate needy children. 
Care and education of colored children. 
Care of orphan and destitute children . 
Care of orphan boys 



King's Daughters 

Private association 

Woman's Christian Association 



Care of orphan and homeless children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care and training of indigent and neg- 
lected children. 

Care of children of working parents . . 

Care of orphan children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of orphan, destitute, and delin- 
quent children. 

Education of needy orphans 

Care and training of orphan children . 
Care of destitute colored children 

Care of orphan and destitute children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of destitute children 



Care and protection of destitute and 
neglected children. 



Care of destitute children 

Care of needy and destitute children. . 
To provide homes for helpless children 



Girls. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



121 



JUMBER OP CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



subsidv i -^"i"?,'!,^ 
from public ^"™" 
funds. """^• 




2,500 



238 

1,500 

820 



12, 901 


1109 


7,582 


1110 


.1,838 


„„ 


8,751 


1112, 


2,000 


1113 


7,448 


1114 


1,166 


1115 


2,478 


1116. 


1,903 


iiir 


9, 332 


ins 


4,000 


1119 


17, 000 


1120 


5,000 


1121 


7,513 


1122 



15,000 


1124 


21, 000 


1125 


1,470 


1126 


2,617 


1127 


5,000 


1128 


9,847 


1129 


19,800 


1130 


6,500 


1131 


1,800 


1132 


12,783 


1133. 


960 


1134 



4,000 11.36 
6,000 1137 

607 |113S 
15,000 1139 
3, 500 , 1140 



122 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



TENNESSEE— Continued. 
Clarlisville: 

Tennessee Odd Fellows' Home 

Del Rio: 

Ebenezer Training Home . . . , 

Greeneville: 

Industrial Home and School 

Knoxville: 

Children' .s Mission Home 

918 State street. 
St. John's Orphanage 

Linden and Spruce streets. 
Maryville: 

Blount County Industrial Home 

Memphis: 

Church Orphans' Home 

750 Johnson avenue. 

Leath Orphan Asylum 

850 Manassas street. 
Memphis Day Nursery and Half Orphanage 
(Old City Hall.) 

St. Peter's Orphanage 

Poplar street and McLean avenue. 
Nashville: 

Day Home for Working Women's Children. 

Polk and Scott streets. 
Monroe Harding Memorial Orphanage 

Salem street. 
Protestant Orphan Asyliom 

Waverly place. 
St. Mary's Orphan Asylum 

Harding pike. 
Tennessee Baptist Orphans' Home 

(West Nashville.) 
Tennessee Children's Home 

Waverly place. 

TEXAS. 
Austin: 

Children's Home 

ICOfi East Eleventh street. 
Corsicana: 

State Orphan Home 

Dallas: 

Presbyterian Home for Orphan Children. . . 

220 Annex avenue. 
St. Joseph's Orphanage 

Adams and Park avenues. 
St. Matthew's Home for Children 

Grand avenue and Gould street. 
Galveston: 

Galve-ston Orphans' Home 

Center street and Avenue M. 
Home for Homeless Children 

Sixteenth street and Avenue K. 
St. Mary's Orphan Asylum 

Forty-first street and Avenue R. 
Houston: 

Bayland Orphans' Home 

De Pelchin Faith Home 

1918 Chenevert street. 

Infants' Home 

1920 Oak street. 
Luling: 

Bell Haven Orphans' Home 

Peniel: 

Holiness Orphans' Home 

San Antonio: 

Protestant Home for Destitute Children 

Kentucky avenue. 

St. John's Orphan Asylum 

745 West Houston street. 

St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

Military plaza. 
Waco: 

Methodist Orphanage 



Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Tennessee. 

Private corporation .• . 

Holston Conference Woman's Home 
Mission Society of the Methodist 
Episcopal Church, South. 

Private association , 

St. John's Episcopal Church 

Blount county 

Episcopal Sisters of St. Mary 

Private corporation , 

Ladies' Day Nursery Association 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Presbyterian Church of Tennessee 

Private corporation 

Dominican Sisters 

Baptist Church of Tennessee 

Tennessee Children's Home Society. . . 

Private corpora tion 

State of Texas , 

Missionary Society of the First Presby- 
terian Church. 
Sisters of Charity , 

Episcopal Cathedral , 

Private corporation , 

Society for the Help of Homeless Chil- 
dren. 
Sisters of Charity 

Private corpoiation 

Faith Home Association , 

Private association 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South 

1 Not reported. 



Care and education of Odd Fellows' 
orphans. 



Care of white children under 10 years. 

Care of orphan and homeless children 
Care of orphans 

Care of pauper children under 16 years 
Care of orphan and friendless children 
Care of orphan and destitute children. 

Care of children under 5 years and 
daily care of children of working 
mothers. 

Care of orphans 

Care of working women's children 

Care and training of destitute orphans 
Care of helpless children 

To provide for homeless and destitute 
children. 

To care for destitute orphans and pro- 
vide homes for them. 

Care of homeless and neglected chil- 
dren. 



Care of helpless children and orphans 

Care and education of white orphan 
children. 

Care of orphan and dependent chil- 
dren. 
Care of orphan chDdren 

Temporary and permanent care of des- 
titute and neglected children. 

Ca7e of orphan children 

Care of homeless destitute childr& ... 
Care of orphan and destitute children , 

Care and training of orphan and indi- 
gent children. 

Care of infant orphans and children of 
working people. 

Temporary care of waifs and aban- 
doned infants. 

Care of orphan children 

Care of friendless, homeless, and des- 
titute children. 

Care of destitute children — 

Care of orphan boys , 

Care of orphan girls 

Care of all classes of orphans , 



Both.. 
Boys.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 

Both. . 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 

Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Both.. 
Boys.. 
Girls.. 
Both.. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSEKIES— Continued. 



123 









NUMBER OF CHILDKEN. 








Number 
of paid 

ployees. 


Amount of 

subsidy 

from public 

funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
Of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 


Total. 


Boys. 


Girls. 




44 


26 


18 


13 


6 


7 


47 


27 


20 


4 


80 


$0 


$5,706 


1141 


7 


7 





3 


3 





8 


8 














700 


1142 


72 


25 


47 


18 


13 


5 


90 


38 


52 


4 








1,378 


1143 


30 


16 


14 


95 


45 


50 


33 


17 


16 


4 








1,400 


1144 


28 


11 


17 


14 


6 


« 


28 


10 


18 


2 





126 


1,345 


1145 


17 


12, 


10 

48 


5 
35 


2 


29 


17 
60 


7 
10 


10 
50 


2 
2 





300 


800 
3,762 


1146 





1147 


59 


28 


31 


45 


21 


24 


54 


26 


28 


7 





7.50 


4,857 


1148 


24 


10 


14 


60 


30 


30 


15 


7 


8 


3 





240 


1,200 


1149 


130 


82 


48 


153 


75 


78 


153 


75 


78 


1 





50 


7,450 


11.50 


101 


67 


34 








98 


58 


40 


3 


1,200 






1,500 
1,320 


1151 


25 


10 


■ ■ 15 


21 


10 


11 


21 


10 


11 







1152 


63 


19- 


44 


16 


5 


11 


64 


19 


45 


6 


0) 


175 


2,700 


1153 


81 


40 


41 


46 


30 


16 


80 


50 


30 


3 


1,000 





3,432 


1154 


41 


18 


23 


17 


8 


9 


32 


13 


19 


4 








3,500 


1155 


20 


16 


4 


(^) 


(') 


(1) 


P) 


0) 


(') 


' 


(^) 





2,500 


1156 


12 


3 


9 


16 


5 


11 


14 


b 


11 


2 





91 


532 


1157 


304 
12 


148 

7 


156 
5 


. 124 
11 


56 
8 


3 


308 
ife 


150 
8 


158 


41 





300 


42,000 


1158 





1159 


45 


20 


25 


35 


21 


14 


53 


22 


31 


1 





1,356 


3, 021 


1160 


30 


16 


14 


120 


65 


55 


62 


28 


34 


3 


0) 


450 


1,300 


1161 


31 


21 


10 


3 





3 


27 


19 


8 


3 








3,500 


1162 


24 


9 


15 


30 


15 


15 


21 


11 


10 


5 


50 


420 


2,000 


1163 


51 


20 


31 


63 


28 


35 


63 


28 


35 


1 








3,500 


1164 


, 26 


12 


14 


4 


2 


2 


28 


12 


16 


4 








4,038 


1165 


18 


11 


7 


60 


22 


38 


32 


15 


17 


7 





242 


2,019 


1166 


7 


4 


'3 


99 


56 


43 


11 


7 


4 


3 





360 


600 


1167 


7 


1 


6 


7 


2 


5 


11 


2 


9 








100 


1,000 


1168 


55 


25 


30 


11 


3 


8 


58 


26 


32 











1,200 


1169 


52 


21 


31 


52 


21 


31 


52 


21 


31 


7 


300 


624 


3,720 


1170 


105 


105 





33 


33 





104 


104 














5,328 


1171 


100 





100 


55 





55 


100 





100 











5,175 


1172 


110 


55 


55 


13 


6 


7 


102 


45 


57 


7 








7,200 


1173 



124 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1.— ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Specific object of Institution. 



Sex of 
children 
received. 



Year 
vfhen 
found- 
ed. 



UTAH. 
Salt Lake City: 

Kearns St. Ann's Orphan Asvlum . 
(East Salt Lake.) 



Children's Aid and E 
Utah. 

11 Earls court. 



Finding Association of 



VERMONT. 
Burlington: 

Home for Destitute Children 

Shelburne road. 
St. Albans: 

Warner Home for Little Wanderers . 



VIRGINIA, 
for Friendless Children. 



Bonair: 

Bethany ] 

Boydton: 

Bethany Home 

Bristow: 

St. Ann's Charitable Institution. 
Danville: 

Danville Orphanage 

Fredericksburg: 

Assembly Home and School. . . . . 



Female Charity School 

Lynchburg: 

Lynchburg Female Orphan Asylu 
Odd Fellows' Home of Virginia. . 



Presbyterian Orphans' Home . 



Norfolk: 

Holt Street Female Orphan Asylum . 
203 Holt street. 



St. Mary's Orphan Asylum 

172 Chapel street. 

Turney Home for Boys 

268 Bank street. 
Petersburg: 

Methodist Female Orphan Asylum . . 

National Orphan Home 

656-658 Halifax street. 
Portsmouth: 

Portsmouth Orphan Asylum 

Richmond: 

Belle Bryan Day Nursery 

201 North Nineteenth street. 



Masonic Home of Virginia. 



Richmond Male Orphan Asylum 

Amelia street. 

St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

Fourth and Marshall streets. 
St. Paul's Church Home 



Roanoke: 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum... 

Salem: 

Baptist Orphanage of Virginia , 

Lutheran Orphan Home , 



Sisters of the Holy Cross 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation , 
Private corporation , 



Trustees of Laura Mott endovrment. 



Private corporation 

Colored Orphan Relief Society . 

Sisters of St. Benedict 

Private corporation 

Southern Presbyterian Church. 



St. George's Episcopal Church. 



Trustees of Samuel Miller endowment . 
Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 

Virginia. 
Presbyterian Synod of Virginia 



Private corporation . 
Episcopal Church . . 
Sisters of Charity — 
Private corporation 
Methodist Church . . , 



Private corporation 

Woman's Christian Association . 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation 



Masonic Grand Lodge of Virgil 



Virginia Annual Conference of the 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South. 

Private corporation 



Sisters of Charity. . 
St. Paul's Church . 
Sisters of Charity. . 

Baptist Church 

Lutheran Church . 
iNot reported. 



Care of destitute children, and daily 
care of children of working mothers. 



Care of orphans and unfortunate chil- 
dren. 

Care of friendless children 

Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of destitute children 

Care of orphan, friendless, and desti- 
tute children. 

Care of homeless and friendless chil- 
dren. 

Care and training of colored orphan 
children. 

Care of indigent girls 

Care of helpless orphan children 

Care of children of deceased Presby- 
terian ministers and Presbyterian 
missionaries. 

Care and training of indigent children . 

Care of white orphan girls 

Care of orphans and half orphans of 
Odd Fellows. 

Care and training of orphan and desti- 
tute children. 

Care of orphan and half orphan chil- 
dren. 
Care of orphan and destitute children . 

Care of orphan girls 

Care and training of homeless boys 

Care and education of orphan girls 

Care of colored orphan children 

Care of orphan children 

Care of children of working mothers . . 

Care of needy foundlings and infant 
orphans (white). 

Care of orphan and abandoned chil- 
dren. 

Care of abandoned colored infants 

Care and education of orphans of 

Masons. 
Care and training of destitute children . 

Care of friendless boys 

Care of indigent children 

Care of indigent girls between 5 and 18 
years. 

Care of orphan boys 

Care of orphan children of Baptist 

parentage. 
Care and training of indigent orphan 

children. 



Both. 
Both. 



Girls. 
Both. 
Both. 

Girls. 

Girls. 
Both. 

Both. 

Girls. 

Girls. 

Girls. 



Girls. 
Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Boys. 
Girls. 
Girls. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NUKSERIES— Continued. 



125 



NUMHER OF CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Total. I Boys. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Amount of 
annual 
subsidy 
, ^'"' from public 
ployees. ^^^^^_ 



2,689 




Income 
from pay 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance, 
1903. 



1,500 
5,500 



1174 
1175 
1176 

1177 
1178 
L179 
1180 
1181 



1184 
1185 
1186 



1188 
1189 



1,000 
2,200 



10, ( 
3,000 



1195 
1196 

1197 
1198 
1199 
1200 
1201 
1202 



1205 
1206 



2 Opened August 15, 1903. 



126 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 1 .—ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S^ 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Super\'ised and maintained by- 



Specific object of institution. 



Sex of 
r'hildren 
received. 



1211 
1212 
1213 
1214 
1215 
1216 
1217 



1220 
1221 



1223 
1224 
1225 
1226 



1228 
1229 



1231 
1232 
1233 
1234 
1235 
1236 



1240 
1241 



WASHINGTON. 
Burton: 

Baptist Missionary Children's Home of the Pacific 
Coast. 
Parkland: 

Parkland Lutheran Children's Home 

Poulsbo: 

Martha and Maria Orphan Asylum 

Seattle: 

Children's Home 

Fourth avenue and Harrison street. 
King County Industrial School , 

Mercer Island. 
Washington Children's Home Society 

431 New York block. 
Spokane: 

Home of the Friendless 

Broom and Washington streets. 
St. Joseph's Orphanage , 

De Smet and Superior avenues. 
Tacoma: 

Woolsey Orphan Home 

1215 North J street. 

WEST VIRGINIA. 
Charleston: 

Da-^ds Child Shelter, The 

1118 Washington street. 
Elm Grove: 

St. John's Home for Boys 

St. Vincent's Home for Girls 

Huntington: 

Colored Orphans' Home and Industrial School of 
West Virginia. 
Parkersburg: 

Henry Logan Children's Home , 

Wheeling: 

Children's Home of the City of Wheeling 

(Woodsdale.) 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery 

2131 Market street. 

St. Alphonsus Orphan Asylum 

2126 Market street. 

WISCONSIN. 
Appleton: 

Children's Receiving Home 

Fifth and Story streets. 
Green Bay: 

St. Joseph's Orphan Asylum 

La Crosse: 

St. Ann's Orphan Asylum for Girls 

1017 Market street. 

St. Michael's Orphan Asylum 

916 Winnebago street. 
Milwaukee: 

Milwaukee Infants' Home 

Prospect avenue and Bradford street. 

Milwaukee Orphans' Asylum 

North and Prospect avenues. 

St. Rose's Orphan Asylum 

Lake drive and North avenue. 
Polonia: 

St. Clara's Orphanage 

Racine: 

Taylor Orphan Asylum : 

St. Francis; 

St. ..Emilianus Orphan Asylum 

Sparta : 

State Public School 

Stoughton: 

Martin Luther Orphans' Home 

Waupaca: 

Bethany Orphans' Home 

Wauwatosa: 

Lutheran Children's Home 

Milwaukee County Home for Dependent Children ... 



Baptist Church 

Private corporation 

Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess Insti- 
tute of Minneapolis. 

Ladies' Relief Society of Seattle 

City of Seattle and King county 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis •. 

Private association 

Children's Home Society of West Vir- 
ginia. 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Pri yate corporation 

Wheeling Union of the King's Daugh- 
ters. 
Sisters of Divine Providence 

Children's Home Society of Wisconsin 
Sisters of Notre Dame 

Franciscan Sisters of the Perpetual 

Adoration. 
Franciscan Sisters of the Perpetual 

Adoration. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Felician Sisters of Wisconsin 

Trustees of the Taylor endowment 

St. ^milianus Orphan Society 

State of Wisconsin 

Norwegian Synod of the Evangelical 
Lutheran Church. 

United Danish Evangelical Lutheran 
Church. 

Evangelical Lutheran Kinderfreund 

Society of Wisconsin. 
County of Milwaukee 

1 Not reported. 



Care of children of missionaries 

Care of destitute children 

Care and education of orphan children 

Care of half orphan and homeless 
children. 

Care of truants and homeless children 
of school age. 

Care and placing of homeless and de- 
pendent children. 

Care of friendless children 

Care of orphan and deserted children. 
Care of poor and friendless children . . 

Care of homeless children 

Care of orphan boys 

Care of orphan girls 

Care and training of colored orphan 
children. 

Care of destitute and friendless chil- 
dren. 

Care of destitute and friendless chil- 
dren. 

Care of children of working mothers..' 

Care of orphans whose parents were 
members of St. Alphonsus church. 



Temporary care of homeless children. 



Both. 
Both. 



Boys. 
Girls. 

Both. 

Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



tute children. 



Temporary care of children of sick or 

needy parents. 
Care of orphan and homeless children 



Care of orphan girls . 



Care of poor and homeless boys 

Care of destitute and orphan children 



Care of orphan, half orphan, deserted, 
and neglected boys. 



Care of orphan children. 



Temporary care of orphan, homeless, 

and dependent children. 
Care of dependent children under 16 

years. 



Both. 
Boys. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 
Both. 



ORPHANAGES, CHILDREN'S HOMES, AND NURSERIES. 

HOMES, AND NURSERIES— Continued. 



127 



SFUMBER OP CHILDREN. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Number 
of paid 

ployees. 



subsidy 

from publii 

funds. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of main- 
tenance. 



175 

2,100 

120 



1,594 
1,112 



2,000 1213 

9,060 1214 

5,637 1215 

3,531 1216 

4,658 1217 



1220 
3,194 1221 

3,084 ^222 
2,055 1 1223 



2,500 
1,300 



6,201 
3,860 
4,507 

3,871 
10, 373 
9,136 
150 
6,000 
12, 000 
37, 922 
5,000 
1,200 
4,494 
21,416 



1229 
1230 



'■ Opened August : 



128 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



ALABAMA. 
Birmingham: 

Hillman Hospital 

1916 Avenue D. 



Huntsvllle: 

County and City Hospital 

Mobile: 

City Hospital of Mobile 

St. Anthony and Broad streets. 



Montgomery: 

St. Margaret's Hospital 

Adams and Jackson streets 
Selma: 

Selma Hospital (colored) 

Parkman street. 



ARIZONA. 
Bisbee: 

Calumet and Arizona Hospital. 
Copper Queen Hospital 



Congress Hospital 

Fort Huachuca: 

United States Army Post Hospital 

Octave: 

Octave Gold Mining Company Hospital 

Phoenix: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Prescott: 

Mercy Hospital 

Sacaton: 

Pima Indian School Hospital 

Tucson: 

St. Mary's Hospital and Sanitarium 



ARKANSAS. 



Fort Smith: 

Belle Point Hospital 

North Tenth and B streets. 
Hot Springs: 

Army and Navy General Hospital 

Barry Hospital 

4 Water street. 
City Hospital for Contagious Diseases . 

Garland County Hospital 

St. Joseph's Infirmary 

1 Cedar terrace. 



Jone.sboro: 

St. Bernard's Hospital 

East Mathews street. 
Little Rock: 

Battle Creek Sanitarium 

16'i3 Broadwaj-. 

cent's Infirmary 

Tenth and High streets. 
Texarkana: 

Emergency Hospital 



St. Vi 



St. Louis Southwestern Railway Compa 
CALIFORNIA. 



spital. 



Eureka: 

Eureka Sanitarium 

Second avenue and 1 street. 



'Opened July. 190:3. 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of Charity 



Madison county and city of Huntsvllle . 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 



United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 



Sisters of Charity 

Society of United Charities. 
Society of United Charities. 



Calumet and Arizona Mining Company. . 
Copper Queen Consolidated Mining, an< 

El Paso and Southwestern Railroad com 

panics. 

Clifton Accident Benevolent Association. 
Congress Consolidated Mines Company.. 

United States Government 

Octave Gold Mining Company 

Sistersof Mercy 

Sisters of Mercy 

United States Government 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 



United States Government 
Dr. William H. Barry 



All, except chronic and tubercular . 
All, except chronic and contagious . 



Smallpox 

All classes 

All classes 

American merchant sea 

All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 



1855 
1843 



Sick and injured miners 

Sick and injured employees. 



Sick and injured miners and railway 
ployees. 



Sick and injured employees 

Sick and injured soldiers and civilians . 



All, except contagious 

All classes 

Children of Pima Indian school. 
All, except contagious 



All classes of whites, exK'ept lying-in cases. 
All classes 



Soldiers, sailors, and veterans 
All classes of males 



City of Hot Springs , 

Garland county j 

Sisters of Mercy i 



Smallpox 

Sick paupers. 
All classes . . . 



Knights of Pythias . . . 
Sisters of St. Benedict. 



Seventh Day Adventists. 
Sisters of Charity 



All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Acute cases only 



St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company 



Utica Gold Mining Company. 



1900 
1888 



Sick and injured railroad men 
Company employees 



Injured and sick miners .. 

All, except contagious 

= Not reported. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



129 



AND DISPENSARIES. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



On .January 1, Admitted dur- 
1904. ing 1904. 



Remaining 
December 31, li Resident. 

1904. il 



Amount ol an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from Total cost of 



82, 400 
2,400 



0) 
816, 0.51 



1,500 
8,094 



5,000 
4,885 



4,352 
8,062 



$29, 067 



6,130 
16, 159 



7, 350 
1,200 



3,599 



4,614 
2,400 



' Opened November 22, 1904. 



130 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



-HOSPITALS AND 



NAME ANP LOCATION. 



CALIFORNIA— Continued. 

Eureka— Continued. 

Receiving Hospital 

Second street. 
Los Angeles: 

Children'-s Hospital ; 

Alpine and Castelar streets. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Humboldt county. 



Children's Hospital Society 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 

I when 
i found- 



Temporarily 



i^) 



Los Angeles Infirmary 

Sunset boulevard. 
Methodist Deaconess Hospital 

228 Hewett street. 



Oakland: 

Alameda County Receiving Hospital . 
Fifth and Franklin streets. 



Sacramento; 

City Receiving Hospital 
Front and J stre< 



Pacific Hospital .. 
Eighth and F streets 
St. Helena: 

St. Helena Sanitarium 



Private corporation 

University of Southern California 

French Benevolent Society 

Episcopal Diocese of Southern California. 

Kaspare Cohn Hospital Society 

Los Angeles county 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Methodist Episcopal Church 



Alameda county 

Fabiola Hospital Association. 
Sisters of Providence 



Pasadena Hospital Association . 



City of Sacramento 

Sisters of Mercy 

Southern Pacific Company . 



All classes 1901 

All, except contagious 1904 

All. except contagious 1902 

All classes of worthy poor 1885 

All, except contagious 1861 

All classes 1887 

Indigent .Jews : 1902 

All classes 1878 

All, except contagious 1898 

All, except contagious 18.57 

All classes ' 1903 

All classes of emergency cases j 1881 

All classes [ 1877 

All classes / ' 1904 



All clas.ses. 



San Diego: 

St. Joseph's Hospital and Sanitarium. 
Seventh street and University 
San Francisco: 

California Woman's Hospital , 

3118 Sacramento street. 



Central Emerger 

New City Hall. 
City and County Hospital, The 

Twenty-second street and Potrero avenue. 



Seventh Day Adventists. 
Sisters of Mercy 



Emergency 1884 

All classes | 189.5 

Company employees i 1868 

All, except contagious 1878 

All, except contagious 1890 



Free Dispensary of the College of Physicians and Sur- 
geons. 

344 Fotirteenth street. 
Fi'ench Hospital 

Point Lobos avenue, between Fifth and SixtH 
avenues. 
German Hospital, The 

Fourteenth and Noe streets. 
Harbor Emergency Hospital 

Mission and East streets. 



City of San Francisco 

City and county of San Prancisc 
Hahnemann Hospital College... 

Emanuel Sisterhood 

Private corporation 



French Benevolent Society . 



Female diseases and maternity 
Emergency 



1868 
1900 



Medical and surgical 

All classes of ambulatory cases. 
All classes 



All classes 1851 



German General Benevolent Society. 

City of San Francisco 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Cooper Medical College , 

Private corporation 

Children's Hospital 

Opened February 8, 1904. 



. All classes 18.54 

.. Emergency 1900 

. I All classes of sick poor 1899 

. I All classes 1896 

Women and children 1876 

All classes 1895 

All, except contagious 1887 

Indigent women and children 1871 

^Number of cases treated. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



131 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


1 

Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
I ing 1904. 


December 31, 
1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 


1 

1 





(1) 


0) 











No 




SO 


0) 
H500 


r 
35 


7 





2 


4 


No 


$0 


318 




38 


460 


28 





26 


20 


Yes 





21, 340 


20,990 


37 


744 


16 


2 


15 


30 


v.. 





38 




0) 

274 


29 








1,800 





30 





2 


5 j No....- 


3. 000 


8,000 


40 





600 


70 





1 


35 


Yes 





25, 000 



22,000 
5,126 


41 




84 







2 


No 







183 


2,107 


206 




12 


25 


Yes 




371 


56, 000 


i 
43 


11 


133 




1 


5 


6 


Y'es 





3,000 


2,500 


44 


35 






2 


30 


35 


Yes 





60, 000 


75,000 


45 


5 


50 


5 


1 


~ 




No 





C) 


(■*) 


46 


3 


2,321 


5 





28 


0) 


No 







8,794 


47 


49 


■ 1 035 


53 




24 


45 


Yes 





34 036 


48,604 


48 


''0 


504 


90 


2 


30 


•'0 


Yes 





16 752 


49 


496 


28 





3 


'^4 


Yes 





50 


5 


320 









No 






51 


24 


425 


29- 


1 


25 


17 


Yes 





22,459 


17,087 


52 


46 


695 


30 




3 


6 


No. 





53 


43 


720 


50 


4 







Yes 





46, 000 


44,000 
0) 


54 




225 


25 


.2 


8 


10 


Yes 





55 i 


33 
27 


254 
7,179 


18 
4 


3 
1 


10 



6 


Y'es 








37,511 
21,180 


56 

57 


Yes 










60 










110,000 
1,,500 




3 25 
3 20 


3S17 


no , 
340 





3 





No 








59 




■ j 


(') 




(') 
















130 


1,468 


! 

115 


6 


5 


60 


Yes 







98 854 


62 


















72,000 



83,000 
11,040 




.» 


3, 052 


i 


3 





3 


No 




64 


(1) 


(1) 


(1) 










No 








65 


35 


597 


36 


12 


23 


Yes 


30, 000 




120 


















59, 019 
59,324 
19,740 


67 


55 


1,261 


50 


4 


7 


43 


Yes 





65 353 


24 


524 


30 


2 


9 




Yes 








Q) 


33,110 


n 


1 


14 


1 


No 











4 Opened 


December, 1903. 










5 Opened 


April 5, 1904. 




1 



132 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



•TAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



CALIFORNIA— Continued. 

San Prancisno— Continued. 

Pacific Homeopathic Polyclinic 

834 Mission street. 
Pacific Hospital 

2000 Stockton street. ' 
Park Emergency Hospital 

Golden Gate park. 
Potrero Emergency Hospital 

Potrero avenue. 
People's Place Dispensary : 

712 Greenwich street. 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

- Park Hill and Buena Vista avenues. 
St. Luke's Hospital 

Valencia street. 
St. Mary's Hospital 

Bryant and First streets. 
St. Thomas Hospital 

300 Page street. 
San Francisco Lying-in Hospital 

Twenty-ninth street and Point Lobos avenue, 
San Francisco Polvclinic 

430 Ellis street. 

Smallpox Hospital 

Southern Pacific Company's Hospital 

Fourteenth and Mission streets. 
Twenty-sixth Street Hospital 

Twenty-sixth and Army streets. 
United States Army and General Hospital 

(Presidio!) ' 
United States Marine Hospital 

(Presidio.) 
.University o£ California Dispensary 

155 New Montgomery street. 
San Jose: 

San Jose Sanitarium 

Race and San Carlos streets. 
Santa Barbara: 

Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital 

Stockton; 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Vallejo: 

United States Naval Hospital 

(Mare Island.) 
Ventura: 

Elizabeth Bard Memorial Hospital 

COLORADO. 
Aspen: 

Citizens' Hospital , 

Boulder: 

Colorado Sanitarium , 

University Hc'spital , 

Colorado Springs: 

Colorado Conference Deaconess Hospital 

915 East Huerfano street. 
Glockner Sanitarium 

2200 North Cascade avenue. 
St. Francis Hospital 

Institute heights. 
Cripple Creek: 

St. Nicholas Hospital 

Third and Eaton streets. ■ 
Denver: 

City and County Hospital , 

Sixth avenue and Evans street. 
Denver and Gross College of Medicine Dispensary — 

Fourteenth and Arapahoe streets. 
Denver Emergency Hospital 

1737 California street. 
Denver Homeopathic Hcspital 

Park and Humboldt streets. 
Denver Maternity and Woman's Hospital 

2221 Downing avenue. 
Denver Sanitarium 

Villa park. 

Mercy Hospital .' 

Sixteenth avenue and Milwaukee street. 
National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives 

Colfax and Jackson streets. 

1 Number of cases treated. 



Hahnemann Hospital College 

Private corporation 

City of San Francisco 

City of San Francisco 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis of the Sacred Heart. 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Private corporation. . : 

Private corporation 



City of San Francisco , 

Southern Pacific Company . 



City and county of San Francisco. 
United States Government 



United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 

Medical department, University of Cali- 
fornia. 

Sisters of Charity 



Cottage Hospital Association. 
Sisters of St. Dominic 



United States Bureau of Medicine 
Surgery. 



Private corporation 



Private corporation . 



University of Colorado . 



Woman's Home Missionary Society of the 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 
Sisters of Charity 



Sisters of St. Francis. 



Sisters of Mercy 

City and county of Denver 

Private corporation 

Denver Emergency Ho.spital Association. 
Private corporation 



All classes 

All, except contagious and i 

Emergency 

Emergency 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

Maternity cases and children's diseases. 



Smallpox 

Company employees. 



Officers, enlisted men, and civilian em- 
ployees of the United States Army. 
American merchant seamen 



All classes . 
All classes . 

All classes . 
All classes . 



1902 
1877 
1889 



1875 
1891 



1870 
1901 



All, except contagious . 

All classes 

All, except contagious.. 

All classes 

All, except contagious . 
All classes 



All classes. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

National Jewish Hospital Association. 



All classes 

All classes 

Emergency 

All, except contagious 

Women and children 

All classes; principally consumptiv 

All classes 

Consumptives 



1902 
1903 
1901 



■ Includes St. Joseph's Home for Incurables. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



133 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NDiMBEK OF PA 



-lUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



741 
1 1, 336 

186 
1,352 
2,015 

291 



2,280 
1 14, 761 



1,878 

'14,588 

200 

284 

154 



146 
3 Not reported. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



25 



No.. 

Yes. 
10 1 Yes. 
5 ' No.. 



16 



No.. 

35 Yes. 

No.. 

20 10 Yes . 

Yes. 

(3) 2 ! No. 

56 ' 16 Yes. 

27 7 No. 

Includes St. Joseph's Home. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 

pav patients, 

1903. 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



40, 000 
4,677 



12, 600 
5, 513 
3,700 
731 
3,000 

11, 714 
6,290 



150 75 

2 58, 000 j 76 

66,672 ; 77 

75,000 I 78 

15,000 ] 79 



(3) 83 

8,461 . 84 

170, 001 85 

37, 245 86 

3, 600 87 

16, 000 88 

8,242 : 89. 

n5,468 90 

61, .578 ^ 91 

5, 500 92 



8,6.51 


93 


35,000 


94 


6,000 


95 


) 


96 


29,069 


97 


12, 400 


98 



73, 000 


100 


1,051 


101 


5,000 


102 


13, 830 


103 


6.740 


104 


4,800 


105 


) 


106 


31,045 


107 



■' Opened February, 1904. 



134 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



S-D LOCATION. 



COLORADO— Continued. 

Denver — Continued. 

St. Anthony's Hospital 

West Sixteenth avenue and Guitman street. 



lighteenth avenue and Humboldt street. 



Sand Creek Hospital, The. 



Georgetown: 

i St. Joseph's Hospital 

! Eleventh and Main streets. 



Grand Junction : 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Colorado avenue. 
Greeley: 

Greeley Hospital 

La Junta: 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Hospita 

Leadville: 

St. Luke's Hospital 

206-208 East Seventh street. 



Montclair: 

Agnes Memorial Sanatorium. 
Pueblo: 

Minnequa Hospital 



St. Mary's Hospital 

525 Quincy street. 
Salida: 

Denver and Rio Grande Hospital 

Red Cross Hospital, The 

Trinidad: 

San Rafael Hospital 

St. Vincent avenue. 



CONNECTICUT. 
Bridgeport: 

Bridgeport Hospital, The 



Wage Earners' Cooperative Hospital, The. 
322 John .street. 
Dan bury: 

Danbury Hospital 

Loc\ist street. 

Emergency Hospital 

City Hall. 
Hartford : 

' Hartford Dispensary 

38 Prospect street. 



St. Francis Hospital 

370 Collins street. 
.Meriden: 

Meriden Hospital, The 

181 Cook avenue. 
Middletovvn: 

Middlesex Hospital 

New Britain: 

New Britain General Hospital 
92 Grand street. 
New Haven: 

Grace Hospital 

1418 Chapel street. 

New Haven Dispensary 

255 Congress avenue. 



New Haven Hospital, The. 
New London: 

Memorial Hospital 

Norwalk: 

Norwalk Hospital 

' Not reported. 



Supervised. and maintained by- 



Sisters of St. Francis . 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation . 



City and county of Denve 
City and county of Denv« 



Private corporation 
Sisters of St. Joseph 



Sisters of Charity. 
Weld county 



Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Employees' 
Hospital Association. 



Private corporation 
Sisters of Charity... 



Private corporation .' 

Colorado Fuel andiron Company. 
Woman's Hospital Association 



Sisters of Charity . 



Denver and Rio Grande Railroad Company 
Private corporation 



Sisters of Charity . 



Private corporation . 
City of Bridgeport... 



Private corporation 
City of Danbury ... . 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Sisters of St. Joseph.. 
Private corporation . 



Middlesex Hospital Association. 
Private corporation 



Grace Hospital Society 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

General Hospital Society of Connecticut. 
Memorial Hospital A.ssociation 



Norwalk Hospital Association 
! Number of cases treated. 



Classes of patients treated. 



All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Smallpox 

Contagious, except smallpox 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Employees of the company 

All classes 

All classes 

Incipient tuberculosis 

Company employees 

All classes.... 

All classes 

Principally railway employees... 
All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except insane and contagious 
Emergency 

All classes of wage-earners 

All classes 

Emergency 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

Acute and emergency 

All clas.ses 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

3 Opened January 1, 1904. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



1886 
1896 



1876 
1904 



1878 
1885 



1885 
1895 
1871 
1857 



1892 
1872 
1901 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



185 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



767 




81 


515 


(') 


52 


412 




32 


267 




14 



8,000 
1, 725 



1 Opened July 2, 1904. 



NUMBEK ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



6 ! Yes... 

Monthly assessments on employees. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



10, 000 
5,000 



Income from ; Total cost of 

pay patients, maintenance, 

' 1903. 1903. 



920 


122, 947 


108 




(') 


109 


141 


43,052 


110 


100 


5, 941 


HI 


500 


8,748 


112 




227 


113 


260 


2,264 


114 



5,000 
5, 123 



5,000 


15,000 


1,500 











11,119 


37,163 


5,000 


6,059 


5,000 


5, 960 


oOper 


led May 23, 1904 



(=) 


116 


(M 


117 


5,000 


118 


0) 


119 



87, 571 


121 


9,257 


122 


) 


123 


24, 118 


124 


8,448 


125 


8,549 


126 



37,431 i 127 
6,000 i 128 



11.495 


130 


200 


131 


223 


132 


38, 343 


133 


28, 743 


134 


7,320 


135 



14,8.57 I 137 

24,000 I 138 

3,415 j 139 

6,360 ■ 140 

82, 942 141 

10,953 I 142 

11,717 : 143 



136 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2,— HOSPITALS AND 



s'AME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



CONNECTICUT— Continued. 
Norwich: 

William W. Backus Hospital, The 

Putnam: 

Day Kimball Hospital 

Stamford: 

Stamford Hospital 

Walllngford: 

Gaylord Farm Sanatorium 

Waterbury: 

St. John's Free Dispensary 

West Main street. 

Waterbury Hospital, The 

Winsted: 

Litchfield County Hospital 

DELAWARE. 
Wilmington : 

Day Nursery and Hospital for Babies 

■207 Washington street. 

Delaware Hospital , 

Fourteenth street. 

Homeopathic Hospital 

Van Buren street and Shallcross avenue. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 
Washington: 

Central Dispensary and Emergency Hospital 

Fifteenth street and Ohio avenue NW. 
Children 's Hospital 

Thirteenth and W streets NW. 
Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-in Asylum. . . 

Twenty-fifth street and Pennsylvania avenue 
NW. 
Columbian Universitv Hospital * 

1335 H street NW. 
Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital 

"08 Massachusetts avenue NE. 
Episcopal Eve, Ear, and Throat Hospital 

1147 Fifteenth street NW. 
Freedmen's Hospital 

Pomeroy and Fifth streets NW. 
Garfield Memorial Hospital 

Florida avenue and Tenth street NW. 
Georgetown Universitv Hospital 

Thirty-fifth and N streets NW. 
Lutheran Eye, Ear, and Throat Infirmary 

Fourteenth and N streets NW. 
National Homeopathic Hospital 

Second and N streets NW. 
Providence Hospital 

Second and D streets SE. 
Sibley Memorial Hospital 

North Capitol and Pierce streets NW. 
United States Naval Hospital 

Ninth and E streets SE. 
Woman's Clinic 

1237 T street NW. 
Woman's Dispensary 

Four-and-a-half street and Maryland avenue 
SW. 

FLORIDA. 
Gainesville: 

National Odd Fellows' Sanitarium , 

Jacksonville: 

Duval County Isolation Hospital 

Emergency Hospital 

St. Luke's Hospital 

Duval and Palmetto streets. 
Key West: 

Monroe County Isolation Hospital 

United States Marine Hospital 

New Augustine: 

St. Augustine Emergency Hospital , 

Ocala: 

Marion County Surgical Hospital 

Orlando: 

Church Hospital 

Pensacola: 

Escambia County Isolation Hospital 

1 Opened September 20, 1904. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

New Haven County Anti-Tuberculosis As- 
sociation. 
St. John's Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Delaware Hospital Association 

Homeopathic Hospital Association of Dela- 
ware. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation _. 

Private corporation 

George Washington University 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

United States Government 

Private corporation 

Georgetown University 

Memorial Lutheran Church 

National Homeopathic Hospital Associa- 
tion. 
Sisters of Charity 

Woman's Home Missionary Society of the 
Methodist Episcopal Church. 

United States Bureau of Medicine and Sur- 
gery. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation , 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows , 

State of Florida 

City of Jacksonville 

Private corporation 

State of Florida 

United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 

St. Johns county and city of St. Augustine. 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

State of Florida 

2 Number of cases treated. 



All classes , 

Acute 

All, except chronic and infectious , 

Incipient pulmonary tuberculosis , 

All classes of poor 

All classes 

All classes 

Sick babies 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

White and colored infants and children.. 
Gynecological and obstetrical 

All classes 

Eye, ear, and throat 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Eye, ear, and throat 

All clas.ses 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Officers and enlisted men of United States 

Navy and Marine Corps. 
Women and children 

Women and children 

All classes 

Contagious and infectious 

Emergency 

All classes (white) 

Contagious and Infectious 

American merchant seamen 

Contagious and infectious , 

Surgical , 

All, except infectious 

Contagious and infectious 

3 Not reported. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



137 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 






1,948 


u 


598 


149 


2,907 


76 


1,278 


18 


1,203 


2 20 


n,622 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NHMBEE ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



•Now George Washington University Hospital. 



Yes . . 
Yes.. 
Yes . . 
No... 
Yes.. 
Yes . . 
Y'es . . 
No*. 



No. 



Amount of an 

nual subsidy 

from public 

funds. 



S5, 000 
3,000 
5,000 












No 





15, 135 
3,286 



5,440 
1,716 



4.54 

11, 455 
89 
4,240 

4,380 
10, 873 



1,250 
714 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



1.200 
23, 022 
10,345 



20, 590 
22,941 
31, 204 

12, 945 

6,498 
50, 000 



12,426 j 162 
150 163 



,266 ' 165 



1,200 


171 


1,500 


172 


11,000 


173 


120 


174 


11, 955 


175 


216 


176 


1,400 




2,500 


178 



5 Opened November 1, 1903. 



138 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
wlien 
found- 
ed. 



FLORIDA— Continued. 

Pensacola— Continued . • 

St. Anthony's Ho.spital 

104 West Garden street. 

St. Augustine; 

Alicia Hospital , 

Florida East Coast Railway Hospital. , 

Tampa; 

Centre Asturiano Sanatorium 

Tampa street. 



Hillsboro County Isolation Hospital 
Warrington: 

United States Naval Hospital 



GEORGIA. 
Atlanta: 

Grady Memorial Hospital 

Butler College and Pratt streets. 



St. Joseph's Infirmary , 

294 Courtland avenue. 
Augusta: 

Augusta City Hospital 

Contagious Diseases Hospital 

Lamar Hospital (colored) 

Gwinnett and Harrison streets. 
Columbus; 

City Hospital 

Fifteenth street and Seventh avenue. 

City Lazaretto, The 

Macon: 

Macon Hospital 

820 Pine street. . 
Savannah: 

Charity Hospital (colored ) 

Thirty-sixth and Florence streets. 
Georgia Infirmary (colored) 



Savannah Hospital 

Dayton and Huntington streets. 

Smallpox Hospital 

Telfair Hospital for Women 

17 Park avenue, east. 
Thomasville; 

Thomasville Charity Hospital 

Waycross: 

Atlantic Coast Line Relief Department Hospital. 
Haynes avenue. 



IDAHO. 
Boise: 

St. Alphonsus Hospital 

State street. 



St. Luke's Hospital 

106 Bannock street. 
Lewiston: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Park place. 
Pocatello: 

Japanese Hospital 

132 Grant avenue. 
Wallace: 

Providence Hospital 

Wardner: 

Wardner Hospital 



ILLINOIS. 



Aurora Hospital 

St. Charles Hospital 

A vision: 

Sacred Heart Hospital 

Belleville; 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

328 West Second street. 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

Belvidere; 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

1 Not reported. 



St. Anthony Hospital Company 



Private corporation 

Florida East Coast Railway Hospital . 
elation. 



Society of the Centre Asturiano 

Hillsboro county and city of Tampa . 
State of Florida , 



United States Bureau of Medicine and 
Surgery. 



City of Atlanta 

Presbyterian Hospital Association . 
Sisters of Mercy 



Medical College of Georgia. 

City of Augusta 

City of Augusta 



City of Columbus . . . 

City of Columbus . . . 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Sisters of Mercy 



Private corporation . 



City of Savannah . . . 
Private corporation . 



Private corporation , 

Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company 



Sisters of the Holy Cross . 

Episcopal Church 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



Sisters of Charity.... 
Private corporation . 



All c\a 



All classes . 
All classes. 



1888 
1893 



All classes (males) . 

All classes 

Contagious 



Officers and enlisted men of the United 
States Navy and Marine Corps. 



All classes 

All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 



1892 
1901 



All. except contagious and insane. 

Contagious and infectious 

All, except contagious 



All classes . 
Smallpox.. 
All classes. 



All classes. 



All classes . 



Smallpox 

Women and children . 



Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart 



St. Francis Catholic Church 

Sisters of St. Francis 

SistersofthePoorHandmaidsof JesnsChrist 
Sisters of St. Joseph 



All, except contagious and infectious. . 
Railway employees and their families. 



All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 



1897 
1895 



1806 



1896 
1896 



1903 
1902 



Sick and injured Japanese . 
All classes 

Sick and injured miners - . . 



All. except contagious 
All classes 



All classes 

All classes ' 

All, except contagious . 



Allcla.sses. 
Contributed b.v 



1900 
1881 



n904 
1901 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



139 



DISPENS ARI ES— Continued. 



NUMBER OP PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAPF. 


Number of 


Training school 
Jor nurses. 


Amount of an- 

from public 
funds. 


Income from 
pay patients. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




20 


317 


13 





(1) 


4 


Yes 


$750 


«8,016 


$7,156 


180 




164 

0) 

283 


9 
13 




1 




4 
1 


4 
6 




604 






5,378 
13,995 

10,098 


181 


Yes 


IS'' 


JO 




8 


No 








188 



18 


00 
20 
272 
















2,500 
(1) 

33,000 




5 
65 













0) 









9 


No 




186 




13 


22 


Yes 






187 


35 


0) 


(1) 


1 


1'' 


18 


Yes 





3,500 


10, 000 


1R8 


















25 
10 
42 


640 
197 
603 


15 
46 





12 
2 
1 


16 
3 
10 


Yes 


14, 000 


10,307 
478 
800 


20,354 
2,100 
5,000 




No 


191 


Yes 




19? 


11 


(') 


0) 





10 


3 


No 




300 


1 000 


193 







1 


2 


No 







554 


194 


30 


939 


19 


2 


12 


12 


Yes 


7,000 


6 000 


12,000 
991 


195 




151 









6 


Yes 


900 


313 


196 


53 


682 

791 


■30 



1 


2 


11 
11 


Yes 


7,000 



0) 


8,300 
0) 

15,254 
10,099 


197 


Yes 


















5,000 




6 
36 


461 


(1) 

19 



3 


1 
12 


12 


No 



3,760 


900 


Yes 





201 


5 


45 






10 


1 


No 





218 


484 


■^n'? 


30 


480 


44 


2 





i 


No 





1,655 
8, 500 


15 79'' 


'>0o 


35 





10 


11 


No 





7,100 


•>n4 


25 


250 


15 





0) 


10 


Yes 





•'> r,o'> 


2,257 
2,500 


905 


20 


106 


9 


1 


5 


Yes 





500 


206 


g 


















5,250 




25 


4.55 


26 





2 


6 


No '..... 




2,527 


208 


3 


56 




1 






No 





- 7, 900 


5,700 


?m 


12 
25 

15 


426 
504 

31 


24 
17 


i 





(1) 

25 


10 
20 




1, 742 


424 


7,264 
8,557 

750 


8,061 
8,929 

1,103 




Yes 




No 


212 


55 
30 


557 
184 


52 
41 






5 
(1) 


17 
11 


No 






(') 


8,843 
0) 


■>13 


No 


214 


25 


311 


11 


6 




4 


No 





3,250 


3, 000 


215 



140 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



_ Classes of patients treated. 



ILLINOIS— Continued. 
Bloomlngton: 

Brokaw Hospital . ; 

St. Joseph s Hospital 

Breese: 

St. Joseph's Hospital .• ; 

Cairo; 

St. Mary's Infirmary 

'2025 Walnut street. 

United States Marine Hospital 

Carlinville. 

Home Hospital 

Champaign: 

Julia F. Burnham Hospital 

Chicago: 

Alexian Brothers' Hospital, The 

Belden and Kacine avenues. 
American Medical Missionarv College Dispensary 

3558 South Halsted street. 
Augustana Hospital 

480 Cleveland avenue. 
Beulah Maternity Hospital ^ 

959-963 North Clark street. 
Brethren's Dispensary 

185 Hastings street. 
Central Free Dispensary 

757 West Harrison street. 
Chicago Baptist Hospital 

3410 Rhodes avenue. 
Chicago Charity Hospital 

2407 Dearborn street. 
Chicago Clinical School Free Dispensary , 

819 West Harrison street. 
Chicago Home for Incurables 

5535 Ellis avenue. 
Chicago Homeopathic Hospital 

364 South Wood .street. 
Chicago Isolation Hospital 

West Thirty-fifth street and South Lawndale 
avenue. 
Chicago Lying-in Hospital and Dispensary , 

294 Ashland boulevard. 
Chicago Maternity Hospital 

10.33 North Clark street- 
Chicago Policlinic and Hospital 

174-176 East Chicago avenue. 
Chicago Union Hospital 

1511-1.525 North Halsted street 
Chicago Wabash Dispensary 

625 West Sixty-third street. 
Children's Memorial Hospital 

606 FuUerton avenue. 
Cook County Detention Hospital 

Wood and Polk streets. 
■ Cook County Hospital 

West Harrison and South Wood streets. 
Cook County Hospital for Consumptives 

(Dunning.) 
Elizabeth E. Marcy Home Dispensary 

134 Newberry avenue. 
Englewood Union Hospital 

840 West Sixty-fourth street. 
Ewing Street Dispensary 

230 Ewing street. 
Frances E. Willard National Temperance Hospital 

343-349 South Lincoln street. 
German American Hospital 

1619 Diversey boulevard. 
German Hospital of Chicago 

Larrabee street and Grant place. 
Hahnemann Hospital of the City of Chicago 

2814-2816 Groveland avenue. 
Harvey Medical College Dispensary 

169 South Clark street. 
Hospital of St. Anthony de Padua 

West Nineteenth street and Marshall boulevard 
Illinois Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary 

227 West Adams street. ' , 
Illinois College Hospital 

182 Washington boulevard. 

' Not reported. 



Evangelical churches of Bloomington 

Third Order of .St. Francis 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of the Holy Cross. . . , 

United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 

Private corporation 

Julia F. Burnham Hospital Association 

Alexian Brothers of Chicago , 

American Medical Missionary College 

Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church 

Private corporation 

Church Mission Board 

Private association 

Baptist churches of Chicago and vicinity . . 

Private corporation 

Chicago Clinical School 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

City of Chicago 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Pri vate corporation 

Private corporation 

Wabash Employees' Hospital Association., 

Private corporation 

Cook county 

Cook county , 

Cook county 

Woman's Home Missionary Society of the 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 
Englewood Hospital A,ssooiation 

Harvey Medical College 

Frances E. Willard National Temperance 

Hospital A.ssociation. 
Private corporation 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

Harvey Medical College 

Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart 

State of Illinois 

Illinois Medical College 



All, except contagious . 



All 



All classes 

All, except contagious 

American merchant seamen , 



Ali, e.xcept contagious . 
All, except contagious . 
All classes (male) 



All, except contagious and insane... 
Unfortunate girls and their children. 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes of sick poor 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

Incurables 

All classes 

Smallpox 



Maternity 

Maternity, and infants under 1 year. 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Wabash railway employees 

All under 12 years, except contagious 

Insane 

Sick poor 

Consumptive paupers 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

All classes 

Number of cases treated. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



141 



DISPENS A RIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1. 
1904 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




14 
23 


329 
190 


10 

42 








10 


Ves 


SO 
325 


$9,636 
6, 612 


$9, 908 
7,228 


216 


No 


217 


16 


(') 


(^, 


0) 


(^) 


7 


No 





2,801 


2,088 


218 






35 











10, .500 







18 


321 


6 


2 




No -. 




11,490 


•?9(\ 










3 


^- 







600 






6 


3.52 







9 


G 


Yes 





6,635 


9, 451 


222 




2 ,592 








' 










095 


-4r> 


2^,000 


= 15 


1 


10 


4 


Yes 





10 


1,500 


224 


u: 


1,730 


109 


4 


17 


» 


Yes 





59,7.51 


48,443 


225 


4.3 


{') 


0) 


1 


3 




Yes 





1,000 


5,500 


226 


- 14 


2 4 50'> 


2 18 


1 


4 





No 





2 807 


4,015 
41,755 


007 


2 125 


2 27 434 


2 90 





80 


^ 


No 





^ 901 


228 


51 






4 


12 


40 


Yes 





35, 985 


279 


25 


304 


10 




10 




No 








3 600 


930 


2 14 


479 


20 


13 


59 




No 








8 000 


231 






1 1 










70,000 
23, 000 




21 


4 


15 


16 


Yes 





14,587 


933 


22 


350 
200 


50 
2'^ 


1 
9 


13 




No 




• 



3,621 


29,524 
15, 887 


-0S4 


Yes 





■^35 


16 


1.50 


19 


1 


2 


• 10 







3,000 


6,000 


0S6 


50 


757 


35 


3 


40 


2.S 


Yes 





20, 000 


19 000 


237 


15 


383 






10 


19 


Yes 





14, 196 




•538 






(M 


J 








No 








967 


939 


18 


348 


25 


1 


15 




No 








7,000 


940 






851 


21,144 


928 


42 


78 




No 







312,920 


9,9 


140 


799 


143 


2 


4 


6 


No 







23, 800 


•M3 


• 25 
40 


2 1,700 
970 


210 
23 



3 


6 
11 


16 






3,393 




109 
15, 215 


105 
19,836 




Yes 


945 


2 15 


2 1,741 


214 


1 


15 




No ;.. 


418 




'>46 


18 


276 


6 


1 


20 


12 


Yes 





{') 


10,000 


247 


26 


460 


35 


(^) 


10 


18 


Yes 





16,000 


16,000 


248 


45 
50 

210 


920 
1,048 


43 

(M 


5 


20 
16 
15 


29 
40 

1 


Yes 







30,887 

41,982 

200 


40, 328 
44,157 
2, .500 


949 




?50 


No 


251 


56 
147 


1,084 

2,100 

242 


50 

212 

8 


2 
3 

1 


20 
32 

40 


18 
5 


Yes 





28,326 



2,000 


36, 194 
37, 300 
3,600 


959 


No 


•>53 


Yes 







254 



' Including Beulah Home. 



142 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



<'D LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by 



Classes of patients treated. 



ILLINOIS— Continued. 

Chicago— Continued. 

Mary Thompson Hospital 

Adams and Paulina streets. 



and Lemoyne street. 



St. Vincent's Maternity Hospital . 
191 La Salle avenue. 



South Chicago Hospital 

730 Ninety-second place. 



United States Marine Ho.spital 

Clarendon and Graceland t 
Wesley Hospital 

Twenty-fifth and Dearborn streets. 



Woman's Hospital of Chicago 

Thirty-second street and Rhodes avenr 
Danville: 

Danville Dispensary 

Lake View Hospital 

Fairohild street and Logan avenue. 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

Green street. 
Decatur: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Wabash Employees' Hospital 

Dixon: 

Dixon Public Hospital 

First street and Dixon avenue. 
East St. Louis: 

Henrietta Hospital 

Fifteenth street and Illinois avenue. 
St. Mary's Hospital 

Effingham: 

St. Anthony's Hospital 

Elgin: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Prospect and Jefferson streets. 

Sherman Hospital 

Center and Spring streets. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

United Hebrew Charities 

National Emergency Hospital Association 

Private corporation 

The United Norwegian Lutheran Church 

of America. 
Norwegian Lutheran Tabitha Society 

Private corporation 

Presbyterian Church .'. , . 

Provident Hospital and Training School 

Association. 
Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ 

Polish Catholic Churcli 

Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ 

Sisters of Charity 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of the Holy Family of Nazareth 

Sisters of Charity 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Northwestern Univensity 

.Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant. . . 

United States Public Health and Marine 

Hospital Service. 
Methodist Episcopal Church 

United Hebrew Charities 

West Side Hospital Association 

private corporation 

Private corporation 

Wabash Employees' Hospital As.sociation. 
Lake View Hospit 1 Association 

Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Wabash Employees' Hospital Association . 

Private corporation 

Protestant Hospital Association 

Siste"s of the Poor Handmaids of Jesns 
Christ, 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Franciscan Si.sters of the Sacred Heart 

Elgin Woman's Club 

Number of ca.ses treated. 



Women and children, except contagious 

and incurable. 
All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Deserving poor 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious and chronic 

Consumptives 

Clinical 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious and tubercular 

Maternity 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

AH classes of poor 

All, except contagious and incurable 

American merchant seamen 

All classes 

All classes of worthy poor 

All classes 

All classes 

Wom:en 

Wabash railway employees 

All, except contagious .-. 

All classes 

All classes 

Company employees and injured passengers 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

s Opened June 1, 1903. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



143 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



Admitted dur- 



175 
134 I 



Remaining: 

December 31, 

1904. 



326 

1,200 

1.522 

1,133 

' 2,906 

1,145 

52 

735 

310 

= 22,7.58 

318 



Includes St. Anthony's Home. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Number of Training school 
nurses. I for nur.ses. 



27 


Yes 


18 


Yes 


27 


Yes 


65 


Yes 


23 


Yes 



Yes. 
No.. 
Yes. 
No.. 
Yes. 
No.. 
Yes. 

No.. 
Yes. 



11 Yes. 

12 i No.. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 

pay patients. 

1903. 



S18, 000 
123, 636 



13, 060 
21,429 



39, 794 
36, 189 



4,580 
'39,794 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



ooo 


255 


666 


256 


092 


257 



000 259 

000 260 

670 261 

Oil 262 



266 



39, 949 267 
55, 213 268 
90,316 j 269 
28,634 ' 270 
5, 133 271 
10,000 I 272 
5,000 ' 273 
4, 327 274 
3, 219 275 
32, 164 276 

8, 070 278 
43, 144 279 



9, 733 


283 


27,426 


284 


7, 500 


285 


8,449 


286 



4,500 




4,000 


290 


3,113 




•'■2,304 


291 


9.205 


10,836 


292 


For 19 


04. 







144 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



ILLINOIS— Continued . 
Evanston: 

Evanston Hospital 

2650 Ridge avenue. 

St. Francis Hospital 

365 Ridge boulevard. 
Freeport: 

Globe Hospital , 

St. Francis Hospital 

South Walnut and Grant streets. 
Galesburg: 

Galesburg Hospital , 

Geneseo: 

Hammond City Hospital , 

Highland: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Jacksonville: 

Our Saviour's Hospital 

■ 446 East State street. 

Passavant Memorial Hospital 

Joliet: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 



Kankakee: 

Emergency Hospital 

Kevpanee: 

St. Francis Hospital 

La Salle: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

O'Connor avenue. 
Lincoln: 

St. Clara's Hospital '. . . . 

St. John's Evangelical Deaconess Hospital 
Litchfield: 

St. Francis Hospital 

Macomb: 

St. Francis Hospital 

May wood: 

Phoenix Hospital 

105 South Fifth avenu(^ 
Moline: 

Moline Public Hospital 

Seventh street and Fifth avenue. 
Murphysboro: 

St. Andrew's Hospital 



i'eona: 

Cottage Hospital 

415 Second street. 

St. Francis Hospital 

524 Glen Oak avenue. 
Quincy: 

Blessing Hospital 

1014 Spring street. 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Broadway. 
Redbud: 

St. Clement's Hospital 

Rock Island: 

St. Anthony's Hospital 

Rockford: 

Rockford Hospital 

509 Chestnut street. 



Springfield: 

St. John's Hospital , 

Eighth and Mason streets. 

Springfield Dispensary 

Springfield Hospital , 

Streator: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Vandercook: 

Vermilion County Pesthouse.^.. 



ukegan: 

Jane McAlister Hospital 
North avenue. 



INDIAN TERRITORY. 
South McAlester: 

All Saints' Hospital 

Mercy Hospital 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Evanston Hospital Association. 
Sisters of St. Francis 



Knights of the Globe Home. 
Sisters of St. Francis 



Galesburg Hospital Association 

City of Geneseo 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of the Holy Cross 

Institution of Protestant Deaconesses. 



Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart. 
King's Daughters 



Sisters of the Holy Heart of Mary 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart. 



Sisters of St. Francis 

St. John's Evangelical Deaconess Society. 



Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Phoenix Hospital Association. 
Citv of Moline 



Franciscan Sisters 

City of Ottawa 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis . 



Sisters of the Most Precious Blood 

Franciscan Sisters 

Rockford Hospital Association 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis ... 

Sisters of St. Francis 



Wabash Employees' Hospital Association . . 
Evangelical Lutheran Hospital Association , 



Sisters of St. Francis 

Vermilion county 

Jane McAlister Hospital Association. 



Classes of patients treated. 



stetrical 
All classes 



All classes. 



All, except contagious . 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious . 
All classes 



All classes 

All, except contagious . 



All classes . 
All classes. 
All classes. 

All classes . 
All 



All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 

All, except contagious . 

All classes 

All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 

All classes 

All, except contagious . 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 



All classes . 



Wabash railway employ* 
All classes 



Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Men y 

1 Not reported. 



All classes . 
Smallpox.. 
All classes . 



All, except contagious 
All classes 



1900 
1890 



1896 
1875 



1897 
1902 



1903 
1902 



1891 
1876 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



145 



DISPEISrSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OP PATIENTS. 


NTJMBEE ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 
pay patients, 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




21 
15 

18 
42 

17 
5 
60 
18 
18 

29 
10 

n 

46 

45 
12 

42 

7 

12 

0) 

25 
12 
47 
70 
15 
115 
5 
29 
25 
23 

96 

(■) 

42 

47 



13 

26 

IT 


217 

135 
399 

465 

66 

164 

270 

542 

1,044 
396 

152 
219 
555 

346 
197 

273 

P) 

222 

230 

352 
1,067 
1,113 

436 

1,327 

26 

395 

413 

1,524 

2 2,241 
730 

130 
241 

647 
258 


23 

18 

10 
48 

16 

2 

80 

13 

15 

78 
29 

12 
18 
41 

45 
16 

25 

4 
23 
15 

59 
63 
18 
126 
6 
30 
19 
25 

92 

44 
51 
5 
14 

19 

18 





5 








1 
1 



1 










2 

6 


. 



4 

12 

4 



1 




1 



1 


12 
9 

« 

■ 9 
5 
3 
20 
20 
20 

5 

16 

10 
15 

4 

4 

0) 

13 
19 
13 
12 


15 
6 

12 


20 

5 

1 
10 


12 

9 
12 

16 

1 
12 

12 

24 
14 

6 
6 
12 

14 
4 

7 
18 

9 

25 
55 
13 
21 

16 
12 
11 

35 


24 

14 

1 

4 

4 


Yes 


$300 





1,200 


813,733 
3,062 

5,015 
5,700 

5,711 
1,600 
2,300 
4,200 
10,986 
9,1.53 

2,912 
3,563 
8,939 

4,000 
3,194 

2,000 

0) 

4,329 

4,200 
2,500 
20,000 
14,783 
10,599 
2,560 
971 
7,629 
7,522 
6,559 

18,500 


11,265 

3,500 



1,774 

11,159 
2,431 


S21,50o 
3,000 

7,412 
5,800 

9,745 

2,600 

2,000 

4,600 

12,998 

17,724 
16,007 

3,240 
3,263 
13,000 

4,000 
4,600 

2,500 

0) 

7,264 

7,682 

5,000 
6,327 
24,000 
14,664 
10,447 
7,500 
1,016 
6,720 
12,318 
5,157 

25, 000 

(1) 

8,000 

3,600 

3,500 

2,807 

12,198 
2,349 


293 


No 


294 


Yes 


•x^n 


No 


996 


Yes . . 


9q7 


No 


•^Q8 








1,050 

1,000 
1,500 

73 
1,000 


825 










No 


^m 


Yes 


"^m 










No 


304 






No 


■Wfi 


No 


S07 


No 


■^08 


No 








Yes 


311 


Yes 


312 









Yes 


314 






2,146 









1,000 

1,000 



















No 


318 


No 


319 


Yes 


320 






No 


3''2 


Yes 












No 


3-'fi 


No 


^■->^ 




500 





R'58 






No 


330 



146 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



INDIANA. 

Albion: 

New Hope Hospital 

Anderson: 

St. John's Hospital 

Jackson street, between Twentieth and Twenty- 
first streets. 
Ashley: 

Ashley Dispensary 

Crawfordsville: 

L. L. Culver Union Hospital 

Elkhart: 

Clark Hospital 

Evansville: 

Protestant Deaconess Hospital 

604 Mary street. 

St. Mary's Hospital 

First avenue and Columbia street. 
United States Marine Hospital 



Fort Wayne: 

Hope Hospital 

Barr and Washington streets. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Holy Cross . 



St. Rochus Hospital 

West Main street. 
Garrett: 

Sacred Heart Hospital 

Houston and James streets. 
Hammond: 

Hammond Hospital 

73-75 Hohman street. 

St. Margaret's Hospital 

48 Clinton street. 
Indianapolis: 

Bobb's Free Dispensary 

City Dispensary 

Alabama and Pearl streets. 



Flower Mission Hospital 

Free Dispensary of the Central College of Physicians 
and Surgeons. 

214 North Senate street. 
Indianapolis City Hospital 



Jeffersonville: 

Eruptive Ho.spital 

Jeffersonville Deaconess Hospital 

415 East Front street. 
Lafayette: 

Home Hospital 

2-102 South street. 

St. Elizabeth's Ho.spital 

Fourteenth and Hartford streets. 
Laporte: 

Holy Family Hospital 

E and Second streets. 



Madison: 

King's Daughters' Hospital 

112 Presbyterian avenue. 
Michigan City: 

St. Anthony's Hospital 

Fifteenth and Wabash streets. 
New Albany: 

St. Edward's Ho.spital 

Seventh and Spring streets. 
Peru: 

Wabash Employees' Hospital 

South Bend: 

Epworth Hospital 

Main and Navarre streets. 



Terre Haute: 

Union Hospital 

1706 North Seventh street. 



1 Opened November, 1903. 



Wabash Employees' Hospital Association. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Deaconess Association 

Sisters of Charity 



United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 



Private corporation . 



Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Heart . 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 



Medical College of Indiana , 
City of Indianapolis 



Indianapolis Flower Mission . 



City of Indianapolis 

Central College of Physicians and Surgeons 



City of Indianapolis 

Phy.sio-Medical College , 



Protestant Deaconess Society of 



Sisters of Charity 



City of Jeffersonville . 
Private association . . . 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of St. Francis 



Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ. 



Sisters of St. Francis. 
King's Daughters 



Sisters of St. Francis 



Sisters of St. Francis 



Wabash Employees' Hospital Association. 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Holy Cross 



Classes of patients treated. 



Private corporation. . 
" Not reported. 



All, except contagious . 
All, except contagious . 



Wabash railway employees 

All, except contagious and infectious. 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

American merchant seamen 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



1895 
1902 



All classes 

All, except contagious . 
Consumptives 



All classes 

All, except contagious . 



All classes . 
All classes . 



Children under 16 years. 



Incurables. 
All classes . 



All classes . 
All classes . 



,\11 classes 

All, except contagious . 



Smallpox . 
All I 



1904 
1891 



1895 
1881 



1866 

1898 



All classes 

All, except contagious j 1875 

[ 
All classes ; [ 1900 

All classes 

All classes 



All, except contagiou 



1903 



All, except contagious i 1902 

Wabash Rail wa y employees 1884 

All, except contagious 1894 

All. e.xcept contagious 1882 

All classes 1 1892 

3 Number of cases treated. 



I 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



147 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remaiiiing 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an 

nual subsidy 

from public 

funds. 



Income from 

pav patients, 

1903. 



'1.5,000 
'1.5,766 



'Clewed during greater part of 1903; reopened June 1, 1904. 



14 Yes 

= Opened February 27, 1904, 



9, 145 
11,285 



17,231 
17, 097 



25, 446 
32, 400 



2,509 
4,922 



15, 



(') 


331 


i") 


332 


S943 


333 


2,769 


334 


I*) 


335 


9,717 


336 


10,890 


337 


13, 327 


338 


12,443 


339 


15,868 


340 


532 


« 


2,902 


342 


1,750 


343 


6,054 


344 


1,700 


345 


6,952 


346 


4, 205 


347 


{') 


348 


500 


349 


42, 127 


350 


250 


351 


22. 446 


352 


35, 236 


353 


1,232 


354 


2,570 


355 


6,140 


356 


22, 721 


357 


2, 215 


358 



(«) 


(") 


361 


(2) 


2,400 


362 





S, 000 


363 


11,494 


15, 592 


364 


1,601 


4,000 


365 



I' Opened November 9, 1904. 



148 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



IOWA. 
Anamosa: 

Anamosa Sanitarium 

Atlantic: 

Atlantic Hospital 

Boone: 

Eleanor Moore Hospital 

Burlington: 



600-610 North Third street. 



Sixth avenue and Ninth street. 



Centerville: 

Centerville Public Hospital . . . 
712 South Main street. 
Charles City: 

City Hospital 

Clinton: 

Agatha Hospital 

Council Bluffs: 

Detention Hospital 



Oak street. 



Mercy Hospital 

Harmony and Frank streets. 



404 North Oak street. 



St. Luke's Hospital 

121 West Eighth street. 
St. Robert's Hospital 

Des Moines: 

Des Moines Detention Hospital 

St. Joseph's avenue, between Fourteenth and 
Fifteenth streets. 

Drake University Medical College Free Dispensary 

406 Center street. 



Mercy Hospital. 



Dubuque: 

Finley Hospital 

Allison and Delhi streets. 

St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital 

James and Peabody streets. 
Fort Madison: 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Hospital 
34 Santa Fe avenue. 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

Third street and Broadway. 
Iowa City: 

Homeopathic Hospital 

Dubuque and Jefferson streets. 

Mercy Hospital 

."305 Bloomington street. 

State University Hospital 

Iowa avenue. 
Keokuk: 

Graham Hospital 

424 North Fifteenth street. 

Keokuk Emergency Hospital 

Keokuk Medical College Free Dispensary 

Seventh and Blandeau streets. 
Lyons: 



Marshalltown: 

St. Thomas Hospital , 

Thirteenth and State streets. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Sisters of Mercy 

Atlantic Hospital Association 

Private corporation 

Burlington Hospital Association 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 



Centerville Hospital Association . 

Private association 

Private corporation 

City of Council Bluffs 

Sisters of Mercy 

Woman's Christian Association .. 



Private corporation 



Sisters of Mercy 

Protestant Episcopal Church. 



Sisters of Mercy 

City of Des Moines , 



Drake University 

Methodist Episcopal Church . 

Seventh Day Adventists 

Sisters of Mercy , 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 



Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad 

Hospital Association. 
Sisters of St. Francis 



State University of Iowa . 

Sisters of Mercy 

State University of Iowa . 



Woman's Home Missionary Society of the 
Methodist Episcopal Church. 

City of Keokuk 

Keokuk Medical College 



Sisters of Mercy 



Sisters of Mercy. 



City of Mason City , 



Private corporation 

2 Opened October 1, 1903. 



Classes of patients treated. 



All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

Al), classes 

All, except contagious. 



All classes , 

All, except contagious. 

All, except contagious 



All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

Smallpox 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious, chronic, and insane 



All, except contagious and i 



All classes . 
All classes . 



Smallpox. 
Smallpox. 



All classes 

All, except contagious and incurable. 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 



Company employees . . . 
All, except contagious . 

All, except contagious . 

All classes 

All classes 



All classes. 



Smallpox.. 
All classes . 



All classes. 
All classes . 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



1902 
1892 



Smallpox , 1901 

AH, except contagious 1902 

3 Opened ovember 17, 1903. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



149 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



I January 1, Admitted dur 
1904. ing 1904. 



1,371 
135 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an 
nual subsidy 
from public 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



$2, 700 
12, 025 
6,500 

3,301 
12, 138 



723 
3,721 



6,500 
11,681 



18,-597 
28, 000 
11,092 
8, 500 



12, 000 
12, 964 



' Opened January 6. 1904. 



' Monthly contributions of employees. 



6,621 
' Number of cases treated. 



S3, 300 
13,164 



5,207 

825 

5,000 

10, 973 



20, 000 

15,577 



150 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



IOWA— Continued. 
Osage: 

William Wood's Hospital 

Ottumwa: 

Ottum wa Hospital 

921 East Main street. 
Sioux City: 

German Lutheran General Hospital 

St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital 

Twenty-first street and Boulevard. 



KANSAS. 
Clay Center: 

Clay Center Hospital 

Coffeyville: 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

Concordia: "' 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Ellsworth: 

Ellsworth Hospital 

Fort Scott: 

Mercy Hospital 

Eighth and Burke streets. 
Goessel: 

Bethesda Hospital 

Great Bend: 

St. Rose's Hospital 

Kansas City: 

Bethany Hospital .■ 

Orchard and Tenny avenues. 



St. Margaret's Hospital, 
jeaven worth: 



627 Marshall street. 



Mitchell Hospital 



Ottawa: 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Hospital . 
North Main street. 
Pittsburg: 

Mt. Carmel Hospital 



Pittsburg City Hospital 

Topeka: 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Hospital 



Eighth and Tenth streets. 

Jane C. Stormont Hospital 

Wichita: 

St. Francis Hospital 

9.57 St. Francis avenue. 

Wichita Hospital 

Chicago avenue and Seneca street. 
Winfield: 

Winfield Hospital , 



Frankfort: 

King's Daughters' Hospital 

Henderson: 

City Hospital and Sanitarium 

Eighth and Green streets. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Ottumwa Hospital Association . 



All, except tubercular . 
All classes 



1902 
189-1 



German Lutheran Hospital Association. 
Sisters of Merc v 



All, except contagious and insane . 



Wonian's Christian Association . 
City of Sioux City 



Sisters of Mercy 



Contagious and infectious 
All, except contagious 



Private corporation 

Good Samaritan Hospital Association. 



All, except contagious and infectious. 
All, except contagious 



Sisters of Nazareth j All classes . 



Ellsworth 
Sisters of Mercy 



Association. 



All classes . 
All classes . 



Private corporation All cla 

Sisters of St. Dominic All classes . 

Methodist Episcopal Church All, except contagion 

Private corporation ! All cli 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis j All classes 

Private corporation I All classes 

Private corporation ! All, excep 



Woman's Christian Temperance Union. 
Sisters of Charity 



All classes . 
All classes . 



Railroad employe 



Sisters of St. Joseph 
Private corporation 



Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother 

Wichita Hospital i 
Association. 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



All, except contagious, infectious, and in- 

1 All classes 

I 
Fe Hospital ' Railway employees 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 



What-.so-ever Circle. King's Daughters. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

Private corporation 



King's Daughters. . 
City of Henderson. 



All exceot incurable. 



All classes 

All classes 

All, except insane and contagious . 



All, except insane.. 

All classes 

- Opened August '28, 1904. 



1901 
1864 



1885 
1900 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



161 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 
pay patients. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




OnJanuary 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining: 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 






17 




l 





0) 

14 




No 


$0 


$629 


$600 


403 


349 


16 





^ 




720 


3,490 


6,567 


404 


4. 
65 

34 

3 

(-1 


162 
1,109 

850 

23 

39 


12 
82 

51 



9 




12 


8 







.5,000 
19,730 

27 445 


7,650 
19,966 

26,030 








1 


30 


25 


Yes 





407 




(1) 

9 


4 


No 




60 


1,510 


408 





No 





(-) 


{^) 


409 










5 


5 







3,034 


3,013 


410 




■'10 


3 





(I) 


3 


Yes 


100 




2,240 


411 


16 
8 


164 
.125 




1 


15 


16 


Yes 


500 


3,000 


3,000 


'11 ■> 


2 




1 


4 







413 


16 


lg9 


15 


.^ 


10 


6 


No 


500 


5,483 


4, 923 


414 










1 




No 





1,023 


1, 123 


415 




47 


■ 148 
355 




















22 


6 


14 


25 


Yes 


500 


7,856 


31, 200 


417 


0) 


(') 


(') 





15 




(') 


(') 


1,000 


1,500 


418 




3,483 
110 


223 
11 


















10 





5 




Yes 





2,500 


2,500 


4?f) 












^ 






0) 

180 


0) 

558 
4,738 




118 


53 
158 


4 
28 


1 
4 


10 


17 


Ye« 


495 



4W 


Yes 


423 










2 




No 








7,565 


424 


17 


317 







25 




Yes 





1,408 


2,844 


4''5 








5 








500 


3,600 


3,000 


426 


5'' 


716 


49 


4 


2 


8 


No 








34, 929 


4''7 




















19,865 


498 


30 









18 


15 


Yes 


500 


15,000 


12,000 


429 


62 




58 


2 


5 


18 


No 


500 


(1) 


15,500 


430 




590 


26 


1 


10 


20 


Yes 


500 


17, 000 


431 


12 


175 







0) 


7 


Yes 





4, 200 


5,900 


43? 


4 


44 





(') 


2 


0) 


300 


995 


1,925 


433 


186 




201 





5 


25 


No 





7 387 


15,000 


434 


32 


425 






29 


14 


Yes 





11, 833 


13,035 


435 


7 


55 


3 





(1) 


2 


No 


600 


267 


1,863 


4,36 


5 


170 




1 


(M 


6 






273 













3 Opened late in 1903. 



152 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by 



1 of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



KENTUCKY— Continued. 
Lexington: 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

323-333 East Sliort street. 
St. Joseph's Hospital 

180 West Second street. 
Louisville; 

Auxiliary Hospital 

112-114 West Green street. 
Broadway Infirmary 

115 West Broadway. 
Children's Free Hospital 

220 East Chestnut street. 
German Methodist Deaconess Hospital 

731 Eighth street. 
Gray Street Presbyterian Infirmary 

329East Gray street. 
Hospital of SS. Marv and Elizabeth 

2213 Twelfth street. 
John N. Norton Memorial Infirmary 

Third avenue and Oak street. 
Kentucky School of Medicine Hospital and Dispensary 

620 Center street and 619 Sixth street. 
Louisville City Hospital 

311 East Chestnut street. 
Louisville Medical College Infirmary 

First and Chestnut streets. 
Red Cross Sanitarium 

2428 Shelby street. 
St. Anthony's Hospital 

Barrett and Wickliffe avenues. 
St. John's Eruptive Hospital 

Seventh street pike. 
St. Joseph's Infirmary 

723 Fourth avenue. 
St. Margaret's Maternity Retreat 

2414 Portlan,d avenue. 
Southwestern Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary.. 

Floyd and Walnut streets. 
United States Marine Hospital 

Middlesboro: 

Epworth Hospital 

Twenty-fifth street and Dorchester 
Owensboro: 

Owensboro City Hospital , 

Paducah: 

Illinois Central Railroad Hospital , 

1435 Broadway. 

Paducah City Hospital 

1208 South Fifth street. 
Richmond: 

Pattie A. Clay Infirmary 

LOUISIANA. 
Monroe: 

Monroe City Hospital 

Eleventh and Washington .streets. 
New Orleans: 

Charity Hospital of Louisiana , 

Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital 

203 North Rampart street. 
Hotel Dieu 

Tulane avenue. 
Milliken Memorial Hospital , 

Tulane avenue. 
St. Joseph's Maternity Hospital , 

1507 Magazine street. 
Sarah Goodrich Hospital 

1566 Canal street. 

Touro Infirmary 

3516 Prytania street. 
United States Marine Hospital 

Shreveport: 

Shreveport State Charity Hospital 

1228 Texas avenue. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth . 



Louisville National Medical College . 

Kentucky University 

Private corporation 



Central German Conference of the Metli- 

odist Episcopal Church. 
Central University of Kentucky 



Sisters of Charity of Nazareth . 

Private corporation 

Kentucky School of Medicine. 

City of Louisville 

Louisville Medical College 

Red Cross clubs 

Franciscan Sisters '. . . . 

City of Louisville 

Sisters of Charity of Nazareth . 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 



United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 



City of Owensboro. 



.City of Paducah , 



Private corporation 



Private corporation 



State of Louisiana . . , 
Private corporation , 

Sisters of Charity — 

State of Louisiana. . 

Sisters of Charity 



All, except contagious . 
All classes 



All, except contagious . 
All classes 



All classes of children, except incurable 

and contagious. 
All classes ' 



1895 
1900 



All classes 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes of poor 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Smallpox 

All, except contagious 

Maternity 

All classes 

American merchant seamen 

All, except contagious , 



1894 
1822 
1893 



1873 
1902 

1847 



All classes 

All, except contagious . 



All, except contagious and infectious. 



All, except smallpox - 
All classes of poor 



Freedraan's Aid and Southern Education 
Society of the Methodist Episcopal 
Church. 

Hebrew Benevolent .Association 



United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 



State of Louisiana. 



All classes 

White children under 14 years . 

Unfortunate girls 

All classes 



All classes 

American merchant seamen 



All classes 

■Assessments of company employees. 



0) 
1863 



1854 
1885 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



153 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



OF PATIENTS. 



On January 1, Admitted dur- , n^^^iSi."! 
1904. ; iugl904. i™04 



S'UMBER OS MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 
pay patients, 



2,006 
140 



8,689 
5,960 















No 














2,600 


Yes 





50 
2,000 
15, 695 

26, 700 

1,500 

426 



$13, 038 
0) 



12, 500 
16, 000 
25, 000 



1,500 


449 


3,500 


450 


1) 


451 


12,000 


452 


12, 000 


453 


2,240 


454 


300 


455 


19,065 


456 


1, 951 


457 


5,714 


458 


= 14,000 


459 


2,693 


460 


3,000 


461 



100, 000 


463 


11.321 


464 


45,172 


465 


(') 


466 


{') 


467 


3,000 


468 


. 50,074 


469 


25, 778 


470 


25,000 


471 



'Included in St. Vincent's Infant Asylum. 



154 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



<D LOCATION. 



Supervised and : 



Classes of patients treated. 



MAINE. 
Auburn: 

Auburn Emergency Hospital ^. 

Augusta: 

Augusta City Hcspital 

Bangor: 

Eastern Maine General Hospital 

Biddeford: 

Trull Hospital 

Lewiston: 

Central Maine General Hospital 

300 Main street. 

Sisters' Ho.spital 

318 Sabattus street. 
Old Town: 

Old Town Hospital 

Portland: 

Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary 

"Congress and Vaughn streets. 

Maine General Hospital 

Arsenal street. 

United States Marine Hospital 

Veranda street. 
Rockland: 

Knox County General Hospital 

Rumford Falls: 

Oxford County Emergency Hospital 

MARYLAND. 
Annapolis: 

Emergency Hospital 

Cathedral and Franklin streets. 
Baltimore: 

Baltimore City Hospital and Dispensary 

North Calvert and Saratoga streets. 
Baltimore Eastern Dispensary 

1300 East Baltimore street. 
Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat Charitv Hospital 

625 West Franklin street. 
Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat Charity Hospital Dis- 
pensary. 

623 West Franklin street. 
Baltimore General Dispensary 

651 West Lexington street. 
Baltimore Southern Dispensary 

106 West Hill street. 
Baltimore University Hospital 

21 North Bond street. 
Church Home and Infirmary 

Broadway and Hampstead street. 
Dickey ville Free Dispensary 

( Dickey ville.) 
Evening Dispensary for Working Women and Girls 

115 West Barre street. 
Franklin Square Hospital 

Calhoun and Fayette streets. 
Hebrew Hospital and Asylum 

Monument and Ann streets. 
Hospital for Consumptives 

(Towson.) 
Hospital for the Home of the Friendless 

1315 Druid Hill avenue. 
Hospital for the Relief of Crippled and Deformed 
Children. 

2000 North Charles street. 
Hospital for the Women of Maryland 

150 West Lafayette avenue. 
Ho.spital of the Woman's Medical College 

McCulloh and Hoffman streets. 
Johns Hopkins Hospital 

501-601 North Broadway. 
Maryland General Hospital 

817 Linden avenue. 
Maryland Homeopathic Hospital and Free Dispensary . 

1140 North Mount street. 
Maryland Lving-in Hospital 

113-115 North Lombard street. 

Maryland University Hospital 

Medical Agency 

1418 Light street. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Old Town Hospital Company 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Supervisors of City Charities 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Baltimore University 

Protestant Episcopal Church of Maryland 

Ashland Manufacturing Company 

Private corporation 

Maryland Medical College 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Woman's Medical College 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

College of Physicians and Surgeons 

University of Maryland 

Supervisors of City Charities 



All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes. 

All classes 

AI 1 classes 

All classes 

All, except venereal, ob-stetrical, and 

in.sane. 
American merchant seamen 

All, except contagious 

All, except maternity 

All, except contagious and obstetrical 

All classes 

All classes 

Eye, ear, and throat 

Eye, ear, and throat 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes of women and children 

All classes 

All classes 

Consumptives 

All classes of sick children 

Orthopedic and surgical 

Women only 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

Obstetrical 

All classes 

All classes of needy poor 

Number of cases treated. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



155 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBEK OF PATIENTS. 



On January 1, 



Admitted cur- pS»l, 
mg 1904. 1904^ 



1,459 
278 



3, 755 
! 24, 692 



228 
162 

195 

108 

4,244 

2,290 

583 



NUMBEK ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



4,000 
5,000 

5,000 
5,000 



5,000 
7,500 



Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 



1,670 

500 





i 4, 000 

4,325 



9,000 



86, 696 
18, 623 

5,000 
18, 792 
■ 9,995 

2,173 
18,748 
43, 377 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



$2,375 


472 


12,866 


473 


23, 280 


474 


6,000 


475 


33, 822 


476 


18, 368 


477 


7,300 


478 


27, 691 


479 



2,750 
500 



525 



1,941 



493 



494 

495 
= 23,000 j 496 



7,500 
1,200 
10, 000 

11,061 
4,500 
249, 771 
32, 000 
13, 785 
6,500 



58,000 



(*) 



497 



'Includes home department. 



'Not open in 1903. 



156 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



VD LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



when 
found- 
ed. 



MARYLAND— Continued. 

Baltimore— Continued. 

Northeastern Dispensary 

1224 East Monument street. 
Northwestern District Medical Agency 

2242 Pennsylvania avenue. 
Presbyterian Eve, Ear. and Throat Charity Hospital . 

1007 East Baltimore street. 
Provident Hospital and Free Dispensary 

415 West Blddle street. 
Robert Garrett Hospital for Children 

27 North Carey street. 
St. Joseph's Hospital 

Caroline and Hoffman streets. 
South Baltimore Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital 

1017 Light street. 
Union Protestant Infirmary 

1514 Division street. 
United States Marine Hospital 

Thirty -first street and Remington avenue. 
University of Maryland Free Lying-in Hospital 

622 West Lombard street. 
Brunswicl;;; 

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Hospital 

Cambridge; 

Cambridge-Maryland Hospital 

409 High street. 
Cumberland: 

Home and Infirmary of Western Maryland 

Frederick: 

Emergency Hospital 

Frederick City Hospital 

Mt. Wilson: 

Thomas Wilson Sanitarium for Children 

Oella: 

Oella Free Dispensary 

Salisbury: 

Peninsula General Hospital 

810 Main street. 

MASSACHUSETTS. 
Adams : 

Greylock Rest Sanitarium 

Baldwinsvllle: 

Hospital Cottages for Children 

Bedford: 

Willard Hospital 

'erly: 

Beverly Hospital 

Boston: 

Adams' Nervine Asylum 

990 Center street (Jamaica Plain). 
.Boston City Hospital 

818 Harrison avenue. 
Boston Dispensary 

Bennett and Ash streets. 
Boston Floating Hospital 

178 Devonshire street. 
Boston Lying-in Hospital 

24 McLean street. 
Brigham Hospital and North End Dispensary 

26 Charter street. 
Carney Hospital 

(South Boston.) 
Charlestown Free Dispensary and Hospital 

1.320 Main street (Charlestown). 
Children's Hospital 

Huntington avenue. 
Faullcner Hospital 

(Jamaica Plain.) 
Galvin Emergency and General Hospital 

142 Kingston street. 
Homeopathic Medical Dispensary '.. 

7.50 Harrison avenue. 
House of the Good Samaritan , 

6 McLean street. 
Jamaica Plain Dispensary 

23 Carolina avenue (Jamaica Plain). 
1 Number of cases treated. 
- Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Supervisors of City Charities 

Presbyterian churches 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis . . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

United States Public Health and Marine 

Hospital Service. 
University of Maryland 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Providence 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

City of Boston 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation '. . 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



All classes 

All, except contagious 
All, except contagious 



All classes of white children, except imbe- 
cile and contagious. 
All, except Infectious 



All classes of indigent poor . 
All acute, except obstetrical 
American merchant i 
Obstetrical 



1848 
1904 
1878 
1894 
1888 
1864 
19013 
1854 



Company employees (emergency; 
All, except contagious 



All, except contagious . 
Children under 5 years . 

All classes 

All classes 



1901 
1875 



Neuropaths and convalescents 

Epileptic, nervous, and deformed. 



All classes 

Indigent nervous persons not insane . 

All, except obstetrical and insane 

All classes of poor 

Sick children (summer months only) . 

Maternity 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of wage-earners 

All classes 

White women and cliildren 

All classes 



1877 
1864 
1796 



1856 
1861 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



157 



DISPENSARIES— Continued . 



NUMBER OP PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



248 

133 

14, 099 

1 93, 578 

942 

671 

8 10, 123 

1,933 

1,424 

309 

(') 

M7,751 

176 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Yes 

No 


12, 000 






No 


Yes 


3,000 


6,000 

6,300 
1,200 
1,500 


5,300 



14, 500 







No 


No. 


Yes 


Yes. 


No 




No 


No 

No 


No 


No 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes. 


No 




590 











Y-es 


Yes.. 


No.. 


Yes 


No 


Yes 


Yes. 


No. 


Yes 


No 


No 





2,700 
1, 527 



50, 675 





2,100 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



3,413 
9,500 



69, 194 
25, 182 



51,125 
7,000 



3,516 


520 
521 


5,651 


522 


t,556 


523 


625 


524 



5,000 
26,594 



8,328 


529 


43,725 


530 


476,857 


531 


21,607 


532 


25,920 


533 


23,722 


534 


3,633 


535 


62,380 


536 


1,500 


537 


41,002 


538 


11,392 


539 


36,0a3 


540 


5,000 


541 


16,260 


542 



' Open only during summer months. 

8 Principally cases treated by dispensary department. 



158 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



maintamed by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 

B oston— Continued . 

Massachusetts ( 'haritable Eye and Ear Infirmary 

233Chajlcs street. 
Massachusetts General Hospital 

Blossom street. 
Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital 

82 East Concord street. 
Mt. Sinai Hospital ' 

17 Stamford street. 
New England Baptist Hospital 

Parker Hill avenue (Roxbury). 
New England Deaconess Hospital 

691 Massachusetts avenue. 
New England Hospital for Women and Children 

Uimock street (Roxbury). 
Roxbury Homeopathic Dispensary 

1224 Tremont street (Roxbury). 
St. Ehzabeth's Hospital 

61 West Brookhne street. 
St. Mary's Lytng-iu Hospital 

Jerome street and Cushing avenue (Dorchester). 
St. Monica's Home 

45 Jay street. 
South End Dispensary and Hospital 

2a MDford street. 
Suflolk Hospital and Dispensary 

4 Charter street. 
Thomas Morgan Rotch, jr., Memorial Hospital for Infants. 

37 Blossom street. 

Tremont Dispensary 

1050 Columbus avenue (Roxbury). 
Trinity Dispensary 

38 Chambers street. 

Tufts College Dispensary 

416 Huntington avenue. 
United States Marine Hospital 

Vincent Memorial Hospital 

44 Chambers street. 

Woman's Charity Club Hospital 

53 Parker Hill avenue (Roxbury). 
Brockton: 

Brockton Hospital 

680 Center street. 
Brookline: 

Brookhne Board of Health Hospital 

Newton street. 

Free Hospital for Women 

Pond avenue and Cumberland road. 
Cambridge: 

Cambridge Hospital 

Holy Ghost Hospital for .Incurables 

1575 Camoridge street. 
Chelsea : 

Rufus S. Frost General Hospital 

138 Shawmut street. 

United States Naval Hospital 

Broadway. 
CUnton: 

Clinton Hospital 

Highland street. 
Everett: 

Whidden Memorial Hospital 

Fremont avenue and Lawrence street. 
FaU River: 

City Dispensary 

Fall River City Hospital 

Roberson and Stanley streets. 

Union Hospital 

490 Prospect street. 
Fitchburg: 

Burbank Hospital 

Foxboro: 

Massachusetts Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates 
Framingham: 

Framingham Hospital 
(South F 
Gloucester: 

Addison GCbert Hospital 

298 Washington street. 

1 Operated as a dispensary. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

New England Deaconess Association. . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of Charity 

St. Margaret's Sisterhood (Episcopal) . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Trinity Church 

Tufts CoUege 



United States PubUc Health and Marine 

Hospital Service. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation . 

Private corporation. 

Town of Brookline. . 
Private corporation. 



Eye and ear 

All, except contagious and chronic , 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor 

All, except mental, chronic, and contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Women and children 

Obstetrical 

Colored women and children . 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor (ambulatory) 

Working women and children 

All classes 

American merchant seamen 

AU classes of women 

Abdominal 



All classes . 



Contagious and infectious . 
Gynecological 



AU, except incurables . 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity (Grey Nuns) I Incurable cancer, consumptive, and par- 

I alytic. 

Private corporation , All classes 



Private association . 
Private corporation. 



City of Fall River. 
City of Fall River. 



Private corporation. 



City of Fitchburg 

State of Massachusetts. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation. 



Officers and enhsted men of United States 
Navy and Marine Corps. 

All, except contagious 

All classes 



All classes of poor. 
AU classes of poor. 



AU cla 



All, except contagious 

Male dipsomaniacs and inebriates. 
All classes 



AU cla 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



159 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



On January 1, Admitted dur- 
1904. ingl904. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
Training school nual subsidy 
for nurses. from public 

funds. 



Income from 
pay patients, 



Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 



5,204 
3,267 
= 6, 165 
332 
185 
1,010 
!4,053 



Yes. 

No.. 



S27, 490 
74, 538 
85, 063 

1, 500 
12,000 

6,234 
17,712 



2,510 




6,961 
10, 208 



8,585 
3, 325 



387,446 


544 


235,249 


545 


150, 426 


546 


2,500 


647 


22,000 


548 


6,351 


» 


45,934 


550 



13,030 
950 
2,055 
632 
31,435 
7,218 



6,365 


565 


16,277 


566 


35,798 


567 


21,584 


568 


10,000. 


569 


) 


570 


14,762 


571 


6,400 


572 


6,910 


573 


21,284 


574 



19, 584 
50, 063 



13, 473 579 



' Included in St. Mary's Infant Asylum. 



160 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 3.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 
Greenfield: 

Franklin County Public Hospital 

16 Main street. 
Haverhill: 

Hale Hospital 

Buttonwoods avenue. 
Holyoke: 

Holyoke City Hospital 



Private corporati( 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation . . 
Sisters of Providence . 



Hyde Park: 

Norfolk Cormty Emergency and General Hospital Private corporation . 

Lavvrence: 

l^awrence General Hospital Private corporation . 

Prospect and Garden streets. 
Lowell: 

LoweU Emergency Hospital ! Private corporation 

283 Gorham street. \ 

Lo.well General Hospital Private corporation 

St. John's Hospital Sisters of Charity.. 

Bartlett and High streets. 
Lynn; 

Emergency Hospital -. .♦. . Private corporation 

42 High street. 

Lynn Hospital Private corporation 

212 Boston street. 

Lynn Hospital for Contagious Diseases City of Lynn 

Union Hospital Private corporation 

(West Lynn.) 
Maiden: 

Maiden Hospital Private coi-poration 

Hospital road. 
Medford: 

Sherman Hospital ' Private corporation 

2 Central avenue. 
Melrose: 

Melrose Hospital 

75 Myrtle street. 

New England Sanitarium 

Milford: 

Millord Hospital 

Main and Prospect streets. 
Montague City; 

Farren Memorial Hospital.. Private ooi-poration . 

Main street. 
Natick: 

Leonard Morse Hospital Private corporation . 

New Bedford: 

New Bedford Emergency Hospital Private corporation. 

194 Purchase street. 

St. Liike's Hospital Private corporation . 

Newburyport: 

Anna Jaques Hospital Private corporation . 

28 Broad street. 
Newton: 

Newton Hospital Private corporation . 

(Newton Lower Falls.) 
North Adams: 

. North Adams Hospital Private corporation . 

Eagle street and Hospital avenue. 
Northampton: 

Cooley Dickinson Hospital 

Palmer: 

Massachusetts Hospital for Epileptics 

Pittsfield: 



North and Waoonah streets. 
Pittsfield General and Emergency Hospital. 
77 West street. 
Plymouth: 

Jordan Hospital 

Quincy: 

City Hospital of Quincy 

Rutland: 

Massachusetts State Sanatorium 



Hosp 
31 CI 



barter. street. 



Salem: 

Essex Union Emergency and General Hospital. 

17-19 Brown street. 
Salem Hospital 

Sharon; 

Sharon Sanatorium 

SomerviUe: 

Somerville Hospital 

' Opened November, 1903. 



Private corporation 

Seventh Day Adventist Church . 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

State of Massachusetts. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

State of Massachusetts. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 



All, except contagious and insane 

All classes 

All classes 

AU classes 

All classes 

All , except chronic and contagious 

All classes of laborers 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious 

AU, except contagious 

AU classes 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria 

AU, except insane and contagious 

AU , except contagious and chronic 

AU classes 

AU classes 

All curables, except contagious or infectious 
All, except contagious and Insane 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

AU classes 

All, except venereal 

AU classes 

AU, e.xcept contagious and tubercular 

Epileptics 

AU, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

AU classes 

All classes 

Consumptives 

AU classes 

AU classes 

Women with incipient consumption 

All classes 

2 Not reported. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



161 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amotmt of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




11 
27 

31 
22 

4 
21 

4 

16 
24 

10 

58 

12 
21 

29 

11 

16 

43 

9 

12 

5 
6 
40 
18 
42 

24 
428 
44 

16 

12 
42 
21 

29 


237 
351 

476 
550 

75 
470 

408 
721 

170 

1,441 

109 
463 

434 

220 
914 
160 

349 

141 
186 

7C2 

470 

322 
130 
750 

115 
290 
689 

84 
785 

55 
460 


20 
16 
28 

8 
26 

1 

28 
46 

4 

67 

4 
17 

25 

9 

27 

19 
10 

41 
11 
50 
22 

17 

467 

.39 

5 

6 
18 
273 

3 
38 
20 
25 





2 
2 


2 

4 


1. 

1 





4 


1 
6 
1 







4 


1 



1 

4 
2 
2 




11 
14 

8 
15 

1 
14 


15 

5 

28 

2 
12 

16 
1 

12 
1 

8 
4 

10 
18 
31 
28 
8 

14 
2 

8 
12 
2 
4 
14 

22 


10 
13 

14 
.12 

3 
20 

1 

14 
18 

3 
18 

18 

3 

12 

42 

10 

5 
22 

34 

16 

14 
49 
30 
2 

6 

7 

5 
22 

2 
21 




S276 












2,882 

48 



$7, 740 
13,000 

11,451 
15,545 

(1) 

8,265 

163 

8,000 
9,762 

2,700 
2,500 

458 

(^) 

9,320 
3,000 
5,653 

37,779 
P) 

6,631 
4,467 
4,980 

11,522 
4,830 

21,273 

8,116 

4,224 
5,799 
12,650 
6,840 

4,688 
42,049 
1,734 
9,177 

8,981 


S7,443 
17,000 

18,346 
9,801 

W 

17,149 

5,000 

17,000 
20,757 

9,156 
23,000 
6,207 

16,453 
4,000 
8,402 

36,970 

8,710 
11,703 

6,740 
25,000 
12,523 
49,485 
19,380 

12,848 
102,129 
30,000 
10,000 

12,658 
120,361 
3,783 
24,624 
17,322 
12,760 




Yes 


581 




582 




,583 


No 


584 


Yes 


58.5 


No 


^m 




587 




588 




,589 










Yes 




p 
1,000 



70 
47 
364 

1,200 


1,537 



.59? 


Yes 


.593 


No 


594 


Yes 


595 


Yes 










.J 






Yes 


film 


Yes 


601 










Yes 


604 


Yes 


605 


Yes 


606 


Yes 



160 


4,000 








Yes 


609 


Yes 


610 






Yes 








5,000 


61? 


Yes 


613 


No 


614 


Yes... 


615 



3 Opened September, 1903. 
30952—05 n 



' Opened late i 



162 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



; of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 
Springfield: 

Hampden Homeopathic Hospital 

132 High street. 

Mercy Hospital 

Carew street. 

j Springfield Hospital 

I Taunton: 

Morton Hospital 

\ 88 Washington street. 

Taunton Emergency Hospital 

100 Weir street. 
' Vineyard Haven: 

United States Marine Hospital 

Waltham: 

Waltham Baby Hospital 

780 Main street. 
Waltham Hospital 

Westfield: 

Noble Hospital -. 

105 Silver street. 
WobTirn: 

Middlesex Cormty Emergency and General 

42 Warren avenue. 
Worcester: 

Memorial Hospital 

Belmont street. 
St. Vincents Hospital 

Winthrop and Vernon streets. 

Worcester City Hospital and Dispensary 

Worcester Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Infirmary 

Pearf street. 
Worcester Hahnemann Hospital 

46 Providence street. 
Worcester Isolation Hospital 

Belmont street. 

MICHIGAN. 
Amasa: 

Amasa Hospital 

Ann Arbor: 

Homeopathic Hospital 

University Hospital 

Battle Creek: 

Nichols Memorial Hospital 

Van Buren and Tompkins streets. 
Bay City: 

Lewis Hospital 

1207 Broadway. 

Mercy Hospital 

Fifteenth and Howard streets. 
Beacon: 

Champion Iron Company's Hospital 

Benton Harbor: 

Mercy Hospital 

Ross and Vineyard streets. 
Bessemer: 

Gogebic Hospital 

First avenue and Spring street. 
Big Rapids: 

Mercy Hospital , 

Calumet: 

Calumet and Hecla Mining' Company Hospital. . 
129 Calumet avenue. 

Tamarack Mine Hospital 

(Tamarack Mine.) 
Crystal Falls: 

Crystal Falls General Hospital 

Delray: 

Delray Dispensary , 

5 Dearborn street. 
Detroit: 

Arnold Hospital for Incurables 

110 Fort street (West Detroit). 
Children's Free Hospital 

Antoine and Famsworth streets. 
Detroit Emergency Hospital 

H and Porter streets. 
Detroit Homeopathic College Free Dispensary. . 

185 Lafayette avenue. 

Grace Hospital 

Harper Hospital 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Divine Providence. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 
Private corporation. . 
Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 
Sisters of Providence? 



City of Worcester. . . 
Private corporation . 



Private corporation . 
City of Worcester . . . 



Hemlock Mining Company. 

University of Michigan 

University of Michigan 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Sisters of Mercy 



Champion Iron Company. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Sisters of Mercy 

Calumet and Hecla Mining Company . 
Tamarack Mining Company 



Private corporation 

Wabash Employees Hospital Association. 
Private corporation 



AU classes 

Medical and surgical 

AD, except elironic and contagious . 
AU, except contagious and insane. . 
All classes 



American merchant seamen. 



All classes 

All, except smallpo-x, chronic, and incurable. 
All classes 



All classes. 



AU classes of women and chUdren, except 

contagious. 
AU, except contagious 



AU, except contagious and incurable . 
All classes of worthy poor 



AU, except contagious 

Diphtheria and scarlet fever. 



Sick and injured miners . 

AU classes 

All classes 



All classes . 
All classes . 



Injured employees. 
AU classes 



Sick and injured miners . 



AU classes 

Sick and injured miners and their familit 
Miners (emergency) 



their fami 
Wabash railway employees . 



Private corporation 

Michigan CoUege of Medicine and Surgery. 
Detroit Homeopathic College 



Incurables 

Sick and crippled cluldren rmder 14 years . 

AU, except contagious 

All classes 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



AU classes 

All classes 

2 Includes St. Vincent's ] 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



163 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



on January, AdnaUted dnr- | ^— ^, 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF, 



Visiting. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from pubUc 
funds. 



Income from , Total cost of 
pay patients, i maintenance, 
1903. 1903. 



11 
1,727 



1,645 
2,615 



102 
Niunber of cases 



10 Yes. 

30 Yes. 

23 Yes. 

8 Yes. 

4 Yes. 

2 No.. 



No.. 
No.. 
No.. 
Yes. 



No. 



No. 

11 

i 
10 j Yes. 

i No.. 



54 I Yes. 
65 i Yes. 




$8,112 
27, 131 

6,454: 
5,000 



678 

11,997 

3,698 

5,000 

11,423 

2 20,676 

27,494 
320 



35, 500 
62,583 



5,791 
15,000 



18,000 
47,073 



3,500 
2,500 



642 



643 

644 
645 
4,500 ! 646 



11, 



647 



' Closed dui-ing 1903. 



164 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



and mamtamed by- 



of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



MICHIGAN— Continued. 

Detroit — Continued. 

House of Providence Maternity Hospital. 
187 KUzabeth street, east. 



Escanaba: 

Delta County Hospital 

Fannie street between Fourth and Fifth streets. 
Grand Rapids: 

Butterworth Hospital 

Free Dispensary 

167-169 North Ionia street. 



St. Mary's Hospital 

145 South Lafayette street. 

Union Benevolent Hospital 

Lyon street and College avenue. 
Hancock: 

Detention Hospital 

Quincy Dispensary 

(Quincy Mine.) 
Iron Mountain: 

St. George's Hospital 

Ironwood: 

Union Hospital 

Ishpemtng; 

Ishpemtng Hospital 

318 Soutii Pine street. 
Jackson: 

Jackson City Hospital 

Samson and Seymore streets. 

White Cross Sanitarium 

106 Wildwood avenue. 
Kalamazoo: 

Borgess Hospital 

314 Portage street. 

Kalamazoo Hospital 

Kalamazoo Medical and Surgical Sanitarium . 
721-735 Asylum avenue. 
Lake Linden: 

Calumet and Heola Dispensary 

Lake Superior General Hospital 

Lansing: 

Lansing Hospital 

319 Cedar street, north. 
Laurium: 

Northern Michigan General Hospital 

Manistee: 

Mercy Hospital and SanitaHum 

Thirteenth and Vine streets. 
Marquette: 

St. Luke's Hospital 

123 Bridge street. 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Filth and Rock streets. 



Menominee: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 
802 Ogden 



Muskegon: 

Hackley Hospital . 
Mercy Hospital . . . 



Norway: 

Columbia Hospital and Training School. 
Main street and Summit avenue. 

Penn and Aragon Hospital 

Petoskey: 

Lockwood Hospital 

Elm and Lindell streets. 
Phoenix: 

Phoerux Mine Dispensary 

Republic: 

Republic Hospital 



Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Solvay Process Company. 



United. States Public Health and Marine 

Hospital Service. 
Private corporation 



Private association . 



Private corporation 

Grand Rapids Medical College. 



City of Grand Rapids . 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation . . . 



Houghton county 

Quincy Mining Company . 



OUver Iron Mining Company. 
Oliver Iron Mining Company . 



United States Steel, and other steel and 
mining companies. 

City of Jackson 

Private corporation 



Sisters of St. Joseph. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Calumet and Hecla Mining Company 
Private corporation 



Private corporation . 
Dr. C. J. Sorsen..... 
Sisters of Mercy 



Obstetrical 

Obstetrical 

All, except contagious and obstetrical. 
All, except contagious and alcohoUc. . 

American merchant seamen 

Women, and children under 2 years. . . 



All classes. 



All classes 

All classes of poor 

Smallpox 

All classes 

All, except contagious. 



Smallpox 

Sick and mjured miners and their families. 



All classes 

Mine employees , 

Sick and injured miners . 

All classes 

All classes 



All classes. 



All, except contagious 

Chronic cases and deformities . 



All, except insane and contagious. 
All, except contagious and insane. 



All classes. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 



Sisters of St. Francis ' All classes. 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of Mercy 



AU. except contagious and incurable. 
AU classes 



Private corporation 

Oliver and Penn Iron Mining Companies. 
Private corporation ' 



Phoenix Consolidated Mi 
Republic Iron Comrany. 



; Company. 



All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious. 
All classes 



1 Not reported. 



Includes House of Providence Infant Asvlum. 



Sick and injured miners 

3 Number of cases treated. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



165 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amoimt of an- 
nual subsidy 
from pubUc 
funds. 


Income from 
pay patients. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




35 
10 
97 

31 
60 

40 

C) 

5 
30 
41 


375 

2 

2 
18 
8 

80 

6 
42 

3 14 

10 
8 
25 
25 

20 
31 

22 

15 
10 
6 
6 




172 

28 

1,708 

356 

592 

607 
(0 

.30 

475 
752 


3 4, .370 

C) 

14 
21 
399 
82 

610 
624 

Q) 

157 
264 
225 

295 
327 

402 

35 

250 

182 
41 

172 

3 1,825 

10 


35 
2 
95 

31 

30 
38 


34 
34 



2 

14 
6 

46 

7 

13 

10 

28 

12 

16 

15 

34' 

4 

39 





3 
4 

1 
3 



3 



2 

1 

1 

5 

1 
5 

0) 



2 

1 


3 


6 


1 


1 


2 


5 
15 
C) 


21 

3 

26 
30 

2 

G) 

30 

1 




12 

12 
8 

5 
6 

(}) 

0) 

5 

5 

30 
20 

2 
0) 

1 




4 
33 
9 

7 
7 


1 

12 
30 

. 1 


4 
2 
3 
8 
6 

24 
5 

7 
7 

5 
10 

9 

12 
5 

4 

2 

5 



2 


No 


SO 





2S930 
2,415 
39,831 
5,000 

9,291 

13, 171 




7,579 
23,167 


13,000 

(') 



757 

5,000 

1,312 

0). 

.3,537 
10, .500 

4,054 
3,454 

2,199 

6,500 

9,681 

9,348 
13,842 

4,500 
6,6.36 
1,000 
3,361 




2 86,700 
2,000 
3G,363 
12,000 
21, 125 
19,000 

15,473 

16,981 
500 

2,771 

5,825 

20,107 

3,500 
12,000 

2,400 
23,017 
8,000 
2,500 

4,159 
13,566 

3,752 
3,202 

3,099 

10,000 

9,444 

9,792 
13,112 

4,320 

(=) 

6,000 

6,021 

3,500 

5,827 

3,000 

1,200 




No 


653 






Yes 


655 


No 


6,56 






2,210 

597 



657 


No 


658 




659 




660 


No . - 


661 


Yes 










663 




664 


No 




.0 




665 


No 


666 


No 


667 




668 




66<> 











600 

1,560 



1,441 

500 




















Yes 


671 








673 


Yes 


674 


Yes 


675 


No 


676 


Yes 


677 


Yes 


678 


Yes 


679 


No 




No 


681 


Yes 




Yes 


683 


Yes 


684 




685 




686 






No 


688 



'Temporarily closed, May, 1904, for new building. 



' Opened November 17, 1904. 



166 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



MICHIGAN— Continued. 



General Hospital 

Houghton and Harrison streets. 



Woman's Hospital 

1413 Jones street. 
St. Joseph: 

Michigan Children's Home Society Hospital. 
1430 South State street. 
Sault Ste. Marie: 

Sault Ste. Marie Hospital 

West Hancock: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Water and Lake streets. 
White Cloud: 

White Cloud Hospital and Sanitarium 

Wyandotte: 

Emergency Hospital 

(Ford.) 



MINNESOTA. 
Austin: 

St. Olaf 's Hospital 

916 Lansing avenue. 



St. Anthony's Hospital 

Biwabik: 

Biwabik Hospital 

Brainerd: 

Northern Pacific Hospital 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Third and Holly streets. 
Breckenridge: 

St. Francis Hospital 

Crookston: 

Bethesda Hospital 

104 St. Paul street. 

St. 'Vincent's Hospital 

Seventh street and Central avenue. 
Duluth: 

Emergency Hospital 

Rice Lake road. 



east. 



St. Mary's Hospital 

Third street and Fifth avenue < 
Eveleth: 

Fabiola Hospital 

Fergus Falls: 

St. Luke's Hospital , 

Grand Rapids: 

St. Benedict's Hospital 

Hibbing: 

Hibbing Pesthouse 

Little Falls: 

St. Gabriel's Hospital 

Madison: 



Mankato: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Minneapolis: 

Asbury and Rebecca Deaconess 



Minneapolis City Hospital 

625 Fifth street south. 
Northwestern Hospital 

2627 Chicago avenue. 
Quarantine Hospital 

(Manhattan Park.) 
St. Barnabas Hospital 

901 Sixth street south. 
St. Mary's Hospital 

2416 Sixth street south. 
Swedish Hospital 

723 Tenth avenue south. 
Universit.y Free Dispensary 

1810 Washington avenue 

' Opened October, 1903. 



louth. 

2 Not reported. 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of Charity . . . 
Private corporation . 



All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious and infectious. 



Michigan Children's Home Society. 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



All classes of children . 



All classes. 
All classes. 



Church of God 

Michigan Alkali Works. 



Austin Hospital Association. 

Sisters of St. Benedict 

Private corporation 



Injured miners . 



Northern Pacific Eeneflcial Association 

Benedictine Sisters Benevolent Association. 



Railway employees and their families. 
All classes 



Franciscan Sisters 

Norwegian Lutheran United Church 

Benedictine Sisters Benevolent Association. 

City of Duluth 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

St. Benedict 



All classes. 
All classes. 
All classes. 



tlnited States Steel Company . 

United Lutheran Church 

Sisters of St. Benedict 

City of Hibbing 



Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate Con- 
ception. 



Lac qui Parle County Norwegian Lutheran 
Hospital Association. 



Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother. 



Methodist Episcopal Church. 
HamUne University 



Private corporation 

City of Mtnneapohs 

Private corporation ' 

City of Minneapolis 

Episcopal Church 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private corporation . : 

University of Minnesota 

3 Monthly contributions of employees. 



Smallpo.x 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

Sick and injured employees. 

All classes 

All classes 

Smallpox 

AU classes 



All, except contagio 
All classes 



All classes 

All classes (ambulatory) , 



Women and children 

All, except smallpox 

Smallpox 

All, except chronic and contagious 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

•• Monthly contributions from 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



167 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 






Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Trataing school 
for nurses. 




22 
42 
18 

14 

12 
10 

6 
35 

• 4 

52 
10 

25 
10 

2 


62 
118 

4 
18 
64 



3. 

26 
7 25 

29 

122 

37 

1 

50 

65 

65 

■31 


372 
911 
321 

4 

240 
250 

75 

186 
384 
41 

709 

■ 445 

187 

248 

12 

1,075 

1,402 

41 

226 

734 



200 

109 

440 

577 

20S 

824 
148 
1,344 
1,164 
1,193 
"2,450 


19 

45 
22 



9 
20 

7 

26 

3 

51 
21 

10 
9 

18 
1 

57 
76 

5 
15 
57 


20 

4 
40 

32 
7 23 

21 

94 

28 

3 

73 

63 

57 


1 

1 
1 



1 







5 


(=) 





2 

. 1 

4 







1 

2 

4 
2 
3 
2 


12 
10 
15 

4 

20 

2 

6 

5 




10 

4 

32 
2 


4 
4 
6 

12 

26 
14 

2 
67 
23 

1 
16 
16 
46 
23 


14 
20 
12 

1 

4 

4 
3 

3 

5 

14 
5 

4 

25 
40 

1 
4 



2 
10 

25 


5 

30 

24 

24 
24 
1 


Yes 


$0 





300 

" 

300 












265 
327 


$8,270 
17,352 
6,615 

275 

(') 

3,048 


2,500 
4,000 
4 1,500 

6,729 

(-) 

2,467 
4,535 

21,000 
19,000 
75 

8,604 


2,859 

(-) 

21,580 


1,200 

4,699 

19,744 



43,769 

25,000 

29,416 




$10,591 
18,973 
5,942 

500 

(1) 

4,000 

3,650 
3 6,000 

2,400 

3,400 

1,000 

6 35,467 
4,925 

2,408 
6,922 
5,111. 
25,000 
40,000 
7,390 

5,690 
410 
{-) 

2,621 

n 

27,516 
400 

2,000 

22,219 
2,480 
39,567 
23,000 
28,356 
2,843 




Yes 


690 


Yes 


691 














Yes 


695 






Yes 




No 








Yes 


700 


No 


701 


(2) 


702 
703 
704 


No 


No 


705 









875 












Yes 


709 


























713 
714 
715 




Yes 




716 

717 


Yes 


Yes 















Yes 







721 
,-1 


Yes 


722 


Yes 


723 


No 









' Monthly assessments of company 



' Opened October 1, 1903. 



■ Number of cases treated. 



168 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



MINNESOTA— Continued. 
New Ulm: 

St. Alexander Hospital 

Owatonna: . 

watonna City Hospital ■ 

828 South Cedar street. 
Perham: 

St. James Hospital 

Princeton: 

Northwestern Hospital 

Red Wing: 

St. John's Hospital 

1407 West Fourth street. 
Rochester: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

St. Cloud: 

St. Raphael's Hospital 

511 Ninth avenue north. 
St. Paul: 

Bethesda Hospital 

249 East Ninth street. 

City and County Hospital 

Jefferson avenue and Colbome street. 

Dale Street Infirmary 

Dale street near Larpentuer avenue. 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Ninth and Exchange streets. 

St. Luke's Hospital 

Sherman and Smith streets. 

St. Paul's Free Dispensary 

204 West Nmth street. 
Springfield: 

St. John's Hospital 

Stillwater: 

Stillwater City Hospital 

1007 Greeley street. 
Two Harbors: 

Two Harbors Hospital 

Virginia: 

Lenont Hospital 

Wabasha: 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

Winona: 

Winona General Hospital 

Ewing street and Indiana avenue. 

MISSISSIPPI. 
Clarksdale: 

Delta Hospital of the King's Daughters 

Greenville: 

King's Daughters' Home 

713 Central avenue. 
Jackson; 

Jackson Sanatorium 

Natchez: 

■ Natchez Hospital 

Vicksburg: 

Confederate Veterans' Hospital 

Mississippi State Charity Hospital 

MISSOURI. 
Cape Girardeau: 

St. Francis Hospital 

Williams and Sprigg streets. 
ChiUicothe: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Eleventh street and Broadway. 
Columbia: 

Parker Memorial Hospital 

Harmibal: 

Levering Hospital 

Market and DowUng streets. 
JopUn: 

St. John's Hospital 

Twenty-second and Joy streets. 
Kansas City: 

German Hospital 

2300 Holmes street. 

Homeopathic Hospital and Training School .1 

1019 East Fifteenth street. 

Kansas City Hospital 

Twenty-second and Cherry streets. 

> Includes St. Alexander Home, 



Sisters of the Poor Handmaids of Jesus 
Christ. 

City of Owatonna 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

German Lutheran Church 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of St. Benedict 

Evangelical Lutheran Conference of Minne- 
sota. 
City of St. Paul and Ramsey county 

City of St. Paul 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Episcopal Church of St. Paul 

Private corporation 

EvangeUcal Lutheran Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother 

Private association , 

King's Daughters 

King's Daughters 

Jackson Hospital Company 

State of Mississippi, Warren county, and 
city of Natchez. 

Vicksburg Chapter United Daughters of 

the Confederacy. 
State of Mississippi, Warren county, and 

city of Vicksburg. 

Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of St. Mary 

University of Missouri 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of St. Mary ; 

Private corporation 

City of Kansas City 



All classes 

AU, e.xcept contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 
All classes 

AU classes 

All classes 

AU classes 

All classes 

Smallpox 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of poor 

AU classes 

AU classes 

AU classes 

AU classes 

AU 
AU 

AU, except contagious and chronic 

AU, except contagious 

AU classes 

All classes 

All classes (Confederate veterans) 
AU classes 

All, except contagious 

AU, except acute mfeotious 

AU, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

AU classes 

All classes 

AU classes of poor 

» Not reported. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



169 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBEE ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




6 
15 
12 
20 

43 
28 
52 

216 

95 
55 

»23 

7 
40 

10 
10 
7 
15 

1 

4 
135 
13 
200 

17 
15 

9 
12 
11 
50 

173 


U45 
125 
200 
300 

2,100 
405 

748 

49 
2,010 
1,042 
3 8,934 

78 
91 

134 

124 

109 
122 
94 

16 
2,031 

401 
233 

296 
215 
190 

104 
3,029 


145 

9 
10 

80 

40 
264 

90 
75 
325 

3 

18 

12 
(-) 

10 

2 

4 

13 

127 

18 

22 

9 
12 

31 

7 

160 






1 



2 
7 

5 
3 


3 

1 

2 


o' 






7 





2 




1 

5 


6 

10 
40 
2 

26 

10 




19 
5 

13 


(^) 

12 

(2) 

4 

5 
12 

15 

15 


10 

4 

30 

11 

19 

. 40 

1 
50 
34 

1 

4 
4 

2 
3 

14 

3 

2 
3 

13 
2 

18 

8 
12 

8 

4 

17 
7 
20 




SO 


1 §7,490 
2,220 
3,541 
3,834 
2,800 

27,000 
10,007 
18,247 
17,372 
1,026 
75,000 
65,305 


1,739 

2,200 
1,000 

10,826 

(') 

700 

1,852 



3,500 

2,800 
2,500 

3,527 
1,500 

21,150 

3,400 




1 $7,872 
3,340 
3,500 
3,851 
2,500 

26,000 
11,061 

53, 142 
10,000 
70,000 
52,615 
2,000 

2,340 

3,700 
5,000 
(-) 
13,345 

1,500 
2,372 
12,000 

16,000 

3,500 
4,000 

8,700 
8,500 
2,000 

17,387 
3,000 
29,000 












150 





798 






Yes 


71^8 


Yes 


729 


No 


730 


NO 


731 


Yes 


im 




733 






734 


Yes 






224 







300 

510 

420 




735 




736 




737 


No 


738 


Yes. 


739 




740 


No 

No 


741 
742 




743 




744 


No 


745 


Yes 


746 


Yes 


747 


No 


2,500 


748 


Yes 


"49 


No 






750 






Yes 


75'> 


Yes 








753 


Yes 


754 





















1 Opened July, 1903 



170 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION". 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



MISSOURI— Continued. 

City — Continued. 
Mercy Hospital 

Missouri and Highland avenues. 
Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital 

706-708 West Tenth street. 

St. George's Hospital .• 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

710 Penn street. 
St. Luke's Hospital 

4i!U7 Central street. 
Scarritt Hospital 

Askew and Harris streets. 
Universitv Hospital 

1005 Campbell street. 
Women's and Children's Hospital 

Eleventh street and Troost avenue. 
Maryville: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

First and Davis streets. 
Moberly: 

Wabash Employees' Hospital 

St. Charles: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

St. Joseph; 

Ensworth Deaconess Hospital 

St. Joseph Emergency Hospital 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

923 Powell street. 
St. Louis; 

Alexian Brothers' Hospital 

3933 South Broadway. 
Bethesda Maternity Hospital 

1210 Gratton street. 
Centenary Hospital 

2945 Lawton avenue. 
Christian Hospital 

2821 Lawton avenue. 
City Dispensary of St. Louis (Branch No. 1) . . . 

Broadway and Salisbury street. 
City Dispensary of St. Louis (Branch No. 2) . . 

3562 South Broadway. 
City Dispensary of St. Louis (Central) 

Eleventh and Market streets. 
Evangelical Deaconess Hospital , 

4117 West Belle place. 
Evening Dispensary f oi- W omen 

1607 Washington street. 
Good Samaritan Hospital 

Jefferson avenue and Dayton street. 
Homeopathic Medical College Dispensary 

2540 Howard street. 
Jefferson Hospital .' , 

2604 Gamble street. 
Jewish Hospital 

5415 Delmar avenue. 
Lutheran Hospital 

Ohio avenue and Potomac street. 
Martha Parsons Free Hospital for Children . . . 

3400 School street. 
Missouri Baptist Sanitarium 

919 Taylor avenue. 
Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital 

California avenue and Hem-ietta street 
Mount St. Rose Hospital 

9200 South Broadway. 
O' Fallon Dispensary 

1806 Locust street. 
Provident Hospital 

Beaumont and Morgan streets. 

Quarantine and Smallpox Hospital 

St. Ann's Maternity Hospital 

1236 North Tenth street. 
St. Anthony's Hospital 

3520 Chippewa street. 
St. John's Hospital '. ; .. 

2228 Locust street. 
St. Louis Baptist Hospital 

2945 Franklin avenue. 



Private association 

Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital Associa- 
tion. 

City of Kansas City 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Church Charity Association of Kansas City. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South 

Private association 

Private coi-poration 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Wabash Employees' Hospital Association . 

Sisters of St. Mary 

Deaconess Home and Hospital Association 
of St. Joseph. 

City of St. Joseph , 

Sisters of Charity 

Alexian Brothers 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

National Benevolent Association of the 

Christian Church. 
City of St. Louis 

City of St. Louis 

City of St. Louis 

Evangelical Deaconess Association of St. 

Louis. 
Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

United Jewish Charities , 

Evangelical Lutheran churches of St. Louis, 

Private corporation 

Baptist General Association of Missouri 

Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital Associa- 
tion. 
Sisters of St. Mary , 

Wasliington University , 

Private coi-poration , 

City of St. Louis , 

Sisters of Charity 

Franciscan Sisters , 

Sisters of Mercy _ 

St. Louis Baptist Hospital Association — 
1 Not reported. 



Needy children and all other i 

Railway employees 

Smallpox 

Surgical 



All classes 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious and infectious. 



Railway employees 
All classes 



Smallpox. 
All classes 



All, except contagious 

Obstetrical 

All classes (white) 

AU classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of women and children 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious and infectious. 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes of indigent children 

All classes 

Railway employees 

Consumptives 

All classes (ambulatory) 

All classes 



SmaUpox... 
Obstetrical. 



me. contagious, and 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious and infectious 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



171 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



Visiting. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
fimds. 



340 , 

! 

'5,000 ! 



7,207 

453 

'35,387 

140 



No.. 
Yes. 



1 No.. 
20 Yes. 

32 No.. 

20 Yes. 

20 Yes. 

10 Yes. 

No.. 

2 . No.. 

4 No.. 
20 Yes. 

No.. 

10 Yes. 

No.. 

8 I Yes. 

14 I Yes. 

25 i Yes. 

5 1 No.. 
35 Yes. 
16 I No.. 

No.. 



6 

(1) 20 

(1) 12 

10 
'- Number of cases treated. 






0) 




(') 


3,085 


S2,590 


11,830 


8,211 


34,200 


36,000 


13,120 


14,325 



1,9.50 

19,579" 


18, 762 

55,150 
1,381 
14,214 
2,300 





50,983 

1,500 

12,000 

2,400 

13,376 

13,800 

27, 500 

21,108 

1,392 

14,474 

4,000 

4,000 

14,426 

17,000 

5,504 

46,385 

19,591 

10,493 

3,500 

2,992 

25,000 
7,825 

) 

23,409 

16,450 



172 



lONKVoLKNT iNsrjrirrioNS. 



TA1U.E *2.— HOSPITALS AND 



t'linliniiml. 

lis I'liililron's lliiaiiilHl. 



rtt, U>iilis liVmiilo MoMiiiliil 

AtHH) AVHIMIIll Mll'OI^I. 

rtt. I.ouiaM\illiiniiliv lloa|iil,il. 
Hil(iou mill MoulgoimMW 



Ht. Miirv'H lunnmn-Y 

loiili l>i\pil\ atiwl. 
U«lli*i\ i-i(nti>a Mi\rU\o Uospitiil 

Mttiii ivvwHiu, l>ot\voiM\ Miii\«l luul \VUuwl>t»go 
stveeta. 



otforatvu ttnil Unwia ovonuos. 

\\'inium")s 1 loai:vtt lU 

WO Dotnuvv nvoniiti. 

I Mlsar>\n'l, Ktvnaaa wul 'IVxaa Knlliomt llosiUiul. 
(\M'i\6r Hvortvhvny ami Uamnuik at roots. 



(MO Haat TuU'toenth ali-oot. 
Spi'lngiltilil: 

S|. ,1ol\i\'a Hospital 

("h»<ati\ti1 atwotaml WaaUtngtou avf 
t^t, UotilaaudSftu li'TOuolaoo Uallroad llo>i|ii 
ttwnxt »t«l Atla»U»i atiwts. 
stftnhw'r.v! 

atanUMvy Wapwaa ry 



(Mty of Ht. L.MiiH 



Wabaah lUmployeea' lIoa])t1iil AHHootatton. 
City otS);, Uiiia 



Siatoraot (dimity. 
I'l'iviito coriHMiitloi 

8istora of St, Mary 



i>H<><>l' MiMrtouri 



III! iMul Marino 



Allolas 
Allolua 



llOVOOM. 



Wonion. 

All, iix(H\|>t oontagUnia. . 

All oltissoa 

All, 0\(H>|1| iHintiiK'ioii.H iiiui lii(i\ctlou,s 

Allolaa.s.vs 

Anwrioiiu mi>i(ilum( «>imu-n 



1S77 
1SS5 



WaMhliiKI"U l'ul\oi-slt> \ 

Privato oorporatlon \\ 



Mtaaoiirl, Knnsaaand Ti^x 

pany. 
I'rlvHltM-orporiitioii 



Slaters of M(m'o>' 

Frlaoo KmployooN' Uosiutal Aasooiatimi .. 

Waliash Kmployooa' lUwpitiil Association. 



MONTANA. 

St,; 

HHUnga: 

St, N'tuwnt'a Hospital 

Uutttv; 

8t. ,»auu>s U(\>ipUal 

0»»vUxlg<^; 

St. Jvvjtiixlv's llnvuxital 

Fovt l^w\tw>: 

s*t. riaiv'a Ho-sivital 
Utwat Kails; 

l\\l«»nbus Hospital 

Third avtM\uo and b'iftwntlv .si wot. 

Montana V>eaw««>aa JloapJtal 

• St. Jol\u"s VU\siUtal 



Sistors of Charity . 
Siatora of Charity. 
Slatwsotchartty. 



MU-lasso.f 

\11, oxwpt ohixvnio and oontagions. 

AH olassos 

..' All classes 

Staters t\( Charity AH olassos 

Montana Deaooiwaa Hospital Corporivtioix . All olassos 



Sisters of CUarlty... . 

Sisters (^ Charity of Provtdenoe. 



Sisters of Cha.rity 

Bldaoopt*! Churoh (vt Montana, 



Uvingstwi; 

St. l.viko'a Vlosivltal 
Missoula : 

.l>eto>\tion lUvspital 

Northern Paoitio Kaiiway Hi.w.i«tal. 



Rpiso<>pi»l Churoh . 



Vine and Oweit streets. 
Noiihart : 

liiolt Mountain Minew" \'n\oi\ Hosj\it<vl. 



Mtaaoviia olty and ootmty 

Northern Paeifio Retteflotai Assooiattoit. 
Sisters (vt Chartty (rf Providence 



NKP.UASKA. 
er<\lven liow: 

Kwkwx How City lUvspltal 



Private assoelftttwt. , 

Private oorpoK>t.iiw 

AlUv v!old and Silver Mining Coi\>i>)>ny . 

Private corpora t ion . . 



AU classics i.><TJ 

AUolaasoa 1SS4 



Contagious 

All, e.xwpt contagions 

AH i. 



ISSi 
1873 



Sick and in,1\ircd miners 1S82 

AU, exwpt coi\tagions and infwtlons 190S 

Sick and injnrt^d minors in^: 



Columlnvs; 

St. Mary's Hasj\ital. 
Uavidnty; 

l>avldClty Hospital.. 



All, oxwpt contagions . 

.\dvov\tists" Interna tionalModioiUMis&ioix- Alhexct^pt oonsmuptlv* 
ary and Uenevolcnt Assot\iatlo»\. i 

Sisters (\( St. Prsvncis I All clas,st\s 



Not wpoftwl. 



Privste ^vrpivnMlon I AU classes 

« Kvvrmcrh- St. Louis Polyclinic Hospital. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



173 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



Visiting. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 

pay patients, 

190.3. 



14 


Yes 


n 


.■> 


No 











? 


No 


660 








in 


No 




n 


No 





n 


No 


674 




No 


3,000 


IS 


Yes 




.3 


No 






No 





20 


Yes 





6 ; Yes 


' 


14 

8 


No 





No 





9. 


No 


200 


n 


No 




6 


No 





in 


No 





n 


No 







No 





1 


No 


n 


2 


Yes 





41 







15 


Yes 





3 


Yes 






35,951 
7,653 
20,000 
18,752 



8,129 
9,580 



8,237 
1,500 



S12,.5fi3 


797 


120,000 


798 


3,325 


799 


59,350 


800 



25,000 
24,204 



9,000 807 
1.50,691 808 



3,611 810 
3 62,475 811 



6,000 814 
36,000 : 815 



26, 476 


818 


6,634 


819 


10, 134 


820 


13,523 


821 



200 


823 


129,797 


824 


22,210 


825 


150 


826 


2,500 


827 



.35,500 8.30 
8,026 831 



'■ Contributions of employees. 



174 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPIT.AJLS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
lound- 



NEBRASK.A— Continued. 
Grand Island: 

St. Francis Hospital 

Kearney: 

Kearney Public Hospital 

Woman's Christian Temperance Union Hospital ■' 
Lincoln: 



Sisters of St. Francis. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

1147 South street. 
Omaha: 

Bishop Clarkson Memorial Hospital for Cliildren. . 

1716 Dodge street. 
Immanuel Hospital 

TMrty-fourth street and Meredith avenue. 



Lincoln Medical College 
Sisters of St. Francis . . . 



Protestant Episcopal Church . 



Methodist Episcopal Church. 
City of Omaha 



Presbyterian Hospital ; Private corporation . 

St. Joseph's Hospital ! Franciscan Sisters.. 

Tenth and Castellar streets. 
Wise Memorial Hospital I Private corporation . 

2225 Sherman avenue. i 



South Omaha: 

South Omaha Hospital 

Twenty-fourth and E streets. 



NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
Claremont : 

Claremont Cottage Hospital Private corporation . 

Concord: 

Margaret PiUsbury General Hospital Private corporation . 

New Hampshire Memorial Hospital Private association. . 

66 South street. 
Dover: 

Hayes Hospital Private corporation . 

45 Summer street. 
Exeter: 

Exeter Cottage Hospital Private corporation. 

2S Pine street. 
Hanover: 

Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Private corporation . 

Haverhill: 

Cottage Hospital 'Private corporation . 

Keene: 

EUiott City Hospital Private corporation . 

Laconia: 

Cottage Hospital j Private association . . 

US Court street. I 

Lincoln : 

Lincoln Hospital ! Private corporation . 

Manchester: 

Elliot Hospital 

(East Manchester.) 

Notre Dame Hospital 

Notre Dame avenue and Wayne street. 

Sacred Heart Hospital 

Nashua: 



Private corporation. 



rospect street. 
Plymouth: 

EmUy Balch Cottage Hospital . 
Portsmouth: 

Portsmouth Cottage Hospital. 

United States Naval Hospital. 



Whitefield: 

Morrison Hospital . 
Woodsville: 

Cottage Hospital . . 



Private corporation. 
Sisters of Charity. . . 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private association. . 



Private association . 



NEW JERSEY. 
Atlantic City: 

Atlantic City Hospital 

26 South Ohio avenue. 
Bayorme: 

Bayonne Hospital and Dispensary. 
12 East Thirtieth street. 



Private corporation 

United States Bureau of Meaicine and 
Surgery. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Bridgeton: 

Bridgeton Hospital ~ I Private association . 

323 Irving avenue. 

1 Opened March 19, 1904. 



All classes . 
All classes. 



All, except contagious 
All classes. 



All( 

All classes 

All, e.xcept contagious . 
Contagious 



All classes . 
All classes . 



All classes . 
All classes . 



All, except contagious . 



AD classes 

Women and children. 



All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious. 



All classes. 
All classes. 

All classes . 
All classes. 



All, except contagious. 



All , except contagious 

Officers and enlisted men of United States 
Navy and Marine Coi-ps. 

All , except contagious 

All classes 



All, except chronic and contagious. 
All, except contagious 



All classes. 
2 Not reported. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



175 



DISPENSAKIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Eemaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amoimt of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income frbm Total cost of 
pay patients, maintenance, 



Yes 






1,200 

500 

3,000 










500 

750 





1,000 


2, .500 


391 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes 




Yes 


Yes 


Yes 






Yes 


Yes..... 






Yes 


No 


Yes 




No 


No 


No 


Yes 





14,000 
1,500 
1,000 


Yes 


Yes 




Yes 





85,000 

244 

3,285 

8,000 

10,048 

10,526 

10,000 

35 

10,000 
40,025 



1,705 
10,765 



6.267 
2,464 



3,000 
1,500 



8,000 
5,629 



8,000 1 837 

I 

I 

10,557 ' 838 

15,000 840 

3,654 j 841 

10,000 { 842 
49,065 843 

8,603 I 844 
4,500 845 



15, 003 
6,794 



6,472 
4,576 



22,200 
13, 226 

4,877 



1 1ncludes a home department. 



'Opened November 11, 



176 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2,— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



NEW JERSEY— Continued. 
Camden: 

Camden Citv Dispensary 

725 Federal street. 
Camden Municipal Hospital 

Ferry avenue and City Line. 

Cooper Hospital - 

West Jersey Homeopathic Dispensary and Hospital . 

West and Stevens streets. 
Elizabeth: 

Ale.xian Brothers' Hospital 

East Jersey and Seventh streets. 
Elizabeth Emergency Hospital 

20 Rahway avenue. 
Elizabeth General Hospital and Dispensary 

East Jersey and Reid streets. 

Englewood: 

Englewood Hospital 

Haokensack: 



Private corporation . 
City of Camden 



Private corporation . 
Private association . . 

Alexian Brothers 

Private corporation. 
Private corporation - 

Private association . 
Private association . 



St. Francis Hospital 

East Hamilton place. 



Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. 

Episcopal Church 

City of Jersey City 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis . 



Montolair: 

Mountainside Hospital , 

Highland avenue. 
Morristown: 

All Souls' Hospital 

Morristown Memorial Hospital. 
Mt. Holly: 

Burhngton County Hospital 

New Brimswick; 

John Wells Memorial Hospital - 
Newark: 



Private corporation 
Private association . 



437-439 High street. 

German Hospital 

Newton and Bank streets. 



Sisters of Charity... 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 

Private association . 

Private corporation . 



Hospital of St. Barnabas 

High and Montgomery streets. 
Newark Beth Israel Hospital 

West Kinney and High streets. 



Newark Emergency Hospital •• 

347 Washington street. 

St. James Hospital 

Elm and Jefferson streets. 



Orange: 

East Orange Homeopathic Dispensary. 
23 Day street. 



Private corporation 

Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey 

Private association 

Private corporation 

City of Newark 

City of Newark 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. . 
Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



New Jersey Orthopedic Hospital and Dispensary i Private corporation . 

148 Scotland street. 
Passaic: 

Passaic General Hospital Private association . 

Crescent place and Lafayette avenue. 

Sisters of Charitv . 



Paterson: 

Paterson Eye and Ear Infirmary Private corporation . 

160 Paterson street. 



1 Not reported. 



- Closed during five months of 1904. 



All classes of poor 

Smallpox 

All, except chronic and contagious 

All classes , 

All classes (males) 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious and tubercular 

AU classes 

AU, except chronic, contagious, and in 

fectious. 
All classes of city poor , 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

AU classes 

All, except contagious 

AU classes 

All, except contagious and incurable 

All classes 

Infants of the poor 

AU classes 

All classes 

Medical, gynecological, and obstetrical 

AU, except contagious 

All classes 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

AU classes of poor 

All classes of indigent sick 

All, except contagious 

AU, except contagious 

AU, except contagious 

AU classes of poor. 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

AU classes 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

s Number of cases treated. 



\ 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



177 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBEE OF PATIENTS. 



25 
1,001 

599 

23 

1,301 

269 
525 



3,011 
3,929 



" 


271 


6 


562 


' 


= 27,891 


215 


3,752 


10 


47 


40 


856 


276 


2,380 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



^ Includes a dispensary. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



1,500 
1,000 




1,000 
3,500 
2,500 
2,500 


1,500 
2,500 


2,500 



Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 



3,001 
2,100 

5,934 
6,000 
9, 745 

3,253 
6,000 



4,301 
3, 472 

200 

720 



5,474 

1,600 

4,400 

11, .527 

1,296 



10,112 
4,200 



7,000 
16,624 



S2, 485 
3,500 



4,500 
34,800 

18,024 
12,000 



20,000 
22,000 

21,881 
11,948 

10,650 
10,266 



7,121 

4,000 
7,315 

24,746 
6,418 
8,902 
5,370 

92,933 
110,000 

16, 772 

25,000 

2,000 
26,074 



17, 907 
17,811 



5 Opened October ] 



30952—05- 



178 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



and maintained by- 



I of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



NEW JERSEY— Continued. 

Paterson— Continued. 

Paterson General Hospital 

Market and Huron streets. 

Paterson Isolation Hospital 

St. Joseph's Hospital -' 

Perth Amboy: 

Perth Amboy City Hospital 

Plamfield; 

Muhlenberg Hospital 

Park avenue and Randolph road. 
Secaucus: 

Hudson County Smallpox Hospital 

(Snake Hill.) 

New Contagious Disease Hospital 

(Snake Hill.) 
SomervUle: 

Somerset Hospital 

Trenton: 

Mercer Hospital , 

St. Francis Hospital 

Chambers street and Hamilton avenue. 

Wm. McKinley Memorial Hospital 

West Hoboken: 

North Hudson Hospital 

189 Pahsade avenue. 

NEW MEXICO. 
Albuquerque: 

St. Joseph's Sanitarium 

Santa Fe Hospital 

816 South Broadway. 
Carlsbad: 

Eddy County Hospital 

Deming: 

Ladies' Hospital 

Fort Bayard: 

United States General Hospital , 

Fort Stanton: 

United States Marine Hospital Sanitarium 

Gibson: 

American Fuel Company Hospital 

Las Vegas: 

Las Vegas Hospital , 

Santa Fe: 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

Silver City: 

Grant County and Ladies' Hospital , 

St. Joseph's Sanatorium and Hospital 

NEW YORK. 
Albany: 

Albany City Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary. . . 

123 North Pearl street. 
Albany City Tract and Missionary Society Free Night 
Dispensary. 

1 Rensselaer street. 
Albany City Tract and Missionary Society Free Night 
Dispensary. 

216 Second street. 

Albany Free Dispensary (South End district) 

Ash Grove and Trinity places. 

Albany Hospital 

Albany Hospital for Incurables 

Kenwood Heights. 

Child's Hospital, The 

Elk and Hawk streets. 

St. Peter's Hospital 

Broadway and North Ferry streets. 
Amsterdam: 

Amsterdam Hospital 

203 Division street.' 

St. Mary's Hospital 

335 Gay Park avenue. 
Auburn: 

Auburn City Hospital 

Lansing street. 
Batavia: 

Batavia Hospital 

1 Not reported. 



Private association 

City of Paterson 

Sisters of Charity 

Private association 

Private coi-poration 

Hudson county 

Hudson county 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Sisters of Charity 

Santa Fe Coast Lines Hospital Association. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

United States Government 

United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 

American Fuel Company 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Hospital 
Association. 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private association 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Coming Foundation for Christian Work In 

the Diocese of Albany. 
Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private corporation 

Private association 

2 Monthly 



All, except contagious. 



Contagious 

All, except contagious. 



All . except contagious and chronic . 
All classes 



Smallpox '. 

All contagious, except smallpox. 



All classes . 
All classes . 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 



Consumptives 

Railway employees. 



All classes 

Consumptive soldiers 
American merchant 
Sick and uijured 
RaOway employees 
All classes 



All classes . 



All classes 

All classes of sick, poor. 

All classes of sick, poor. 

All classes of sick, poor. 

All, except contagious. . . 
Inciu-ables 



Children between 1 and 15 years. 
All, except contagious 



All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All except venereal, tubercular, and insane. 



All, except contagious, 
assessments of employee 



1872 
1895 



1875 
1867 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



179 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Visiting. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 
pay patients, 



* Number of cases treated. 





No 


16 


Yes 


1'' 


No 


21 




5 


Yes 



1,200 
1,218 



1,200 
1,200 



8,000 
4,500 



4,642 
8,000 



1,137 
6,311 



1,550 
10,082 



S41,886 
6,500 



7,500 
17,000 



18,067 
21,422 



14, 652 
7,336 



25,538 
12,000 



! 10, 000 
4,000 



1,500 
83,932 



12, 408 
5,500 



' Opened April, 1903. 



180 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 
Bedford: 

Montefiore Home Country Sanitarium 

(Bedford Station.) 
Bingliamton: 

Binghamton City Hospital 

24-40 Mitchell avenue. 
Brooklyn: i 

Bedford Dispensary and Hospital 

343-345 Ralpli avenue. 

Bethany Deaconess Hospital 

237 St. Nicholas avenue. 

Bradford Street Emergency Hospital 

109 Bradford street. 
Brooklyn Central Dispensary 

29 Third avenue. 
Brooklyn City Dispensary 

11 TiUary street. 
Brooklyn Eastern District Dispensary and Hospital 

106-112 South Third street. 
Brooklyn Eye and Ear Hospital and Dispensary 

94 Livingston street. 
Brooklyn Hospital 

Raymond street and De Kalb avenue. 
Bushwick and East Brooklyn Dispensary 

1095-1097 Myrtle avenue. 
Bush\vick Hospital 

Howard avenue and Monroe street. 
Central Homeopathic Dispensary 

298 Howard avenue. 
Cumberland Street Hospital 

105-111 Cumberland street. 
East New York Dispensary 

129 Watkins street. 
Emergency Hospital < 

(Coney Island.) 
Fifteenth Street Baptist Church Dispensary 

159 Fifteenth street. 
Gates Avenue Homeopathic Dispensary 

13 Gates avenue. 
German Hospital 

St. Nicolas avenue and Stanhope street. 
Jewish Hospital Dispensary 

70 Johnson avenue. 
Kings County Hospital 

(Flatbush.) 
Kingston Avenue Hospital 

Kingston avenue and Rutland road. 
Long Island CoDege Hospital 

Pacific and Amity streets. 
Long Island Throat Hospital and Eye Infirmary 

55 Willoughby street. 
Lutheran Hospital 

East New York avenue and Junius street. 
Memorial Dispepsary 

811 Bedford avenue. 
Memorial Hospital for Women and Children 

827 Sterling place. 
Methodist Episcopal Hospital 

Sixth street. 
Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess Home and Hospital 

Foui-th avenue and Forty-sixth street. 
Prospect Heights Hospital and Brooklyn Maternity 

775 Wasliington avenue. 
St. Catharine's Hospital 

250 Bushwick avenue. 
St. Christopher's Hospital for Babies 

283 Hicks street. 
St. John's Hospital 

Atlantic and Albany avenues. 
St. Mary's Hospital 

St. Marks and Buffalo avenues. 
St. Mary's Maternity and Infants' Home 

153 Dean street. 
St. Peter's Hospital 

Henry street. 
United States Naval Hospital 

Flushing avenue. 
Williamsburg Hospital 

Bedford avenue and South Third street. 

1 Part of New York city. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private coi-poration 

City of Binghamton 

Private corporation 

Bethany Deaconess Society of the East Ger- 
man Conference of the Methodist Episco- 
pal Church. 

Department of PubUc Charities 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Commissioner of Public Charities 

Private corporation 

Department of PubUc Charities 

Fifteenth Street Baptist Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Jewish Hospital 

Department of PubUc Charities 

City of New York 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Lutheran Hospital Association of the City 

of New York. 
Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Norwegian Lutheran Deaconesses' Home 

and Hospital Corporation. 
Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Domtoic 

Private corporation 

Chui'ch Charity Foimdation of Long Is- 
land. 
Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

United States Bureau of Medicine and Sur- 
gery. 
Private corporation 

2 Not reported. 



I of patients treated. 



Consumptives 

All classes 

All classes of indigent sick 

AU, except contagious 

All, except contagious. 

All classes of sick poor 

AU classes of sick poor 

All, except chronic and contagious 

Eye, ear, throat, skin, and nervous cases . 

AU, except contagious and chronic 

AU classes of sick poor 

AU, except contagious 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes of sick poor 

AU, except contagious 

AU classes of sick poor 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor 

All, except contagious 

Infectious 

AU, except contagious and insane 

Nose, throat, eye, and ear 

All, except contagious 

Women and children 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious and incurable 

AU, except contagious 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious 

AU, except contagious 

AU, except incurables 

AU, except iofectious and incurable 

Maternity 

All classes 

Officers and enlisted men of United States 
Navy and Marine Corps. 

AU, except contagious, tubercular, and in- 
sane. 

sNvunber of cases treated. 



Year 
when 
lound- 



1902 
1855 
1846 
1851 



1901 
1901 



1901 
1840 
1887 
1858 
1889 



1896 
1851 



i 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



181 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 
























Number of 
nurses. 


Traioing school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 
pay parents, 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 






235 


160 


3 


3 




No 


SO 


$270 


$49,744 


940 


15 


385 







12 


12 


Yes ■...,... 






13,203 


941 




171 










No 






1,202 


94"^ 


12 











Yes 





5,000 


5,500 


943 


1 


100 


3 




37 


2 


No 







5,380 


944 




3 4,822 


3 20 





10 





No.. 


689 





2,300 


945 











■ 10 





No.. 


450 




2,200 


946 


(2) 


632 


30 


3 


20 


11 


Yes 


3,600 


2,850 


12,700 


947 






















948 


103 


2,144 

3 7,784 

526 


107 


7 


14 


45 


Yes 


14, 650 




62,420 


949 


3 11 










1 


No 


588 





14, 413 


950 


34 


23 


3 


21 


13 


Yes 


1,672 


11,334 


961 


(2) 

159 


3 7,440 


(2) 


6 







No 





336 


707 




2,298 


■ 185 




30 


26 


Yes 







55, 883 


953 




3 3,625 

5 82 










No 
















60 


2 


No 






1,421 


955 


34 
312 
64 


3 1,200 
3 1,379 
1,737 




3 21 





4 


3 
20 


1 

24 


No 




235 

3,324 


175 



21,987 


176 

733 

41,647 


956 








958 






3 59 





20 





No '..... 








959 


531 


9,110 


651 


20 


60 


64 


Yes 







202, 665 


960 


105 


2,051 


148 






25 


No 






41,011 


961 


156 


3,255 


166 


7 


33 


50 


Yes 





52 207 


58,832 


962 





3 1,297 
111 


3 10 










No 





61 


963 


33 


23 





12 


4 


Yes 


1,804 


2,974 


9,111 


964 


3 20 


3 1,780 


3 10 




12 





No.. 


267 




1,167 


965 


11 


161 


10 




12 


16 


Yes 


c 


16,726 
27,666 


19, 439 
80,000 
14,620 
16,611 
70,134 


966 


102 


2,452 
1,014 


90 


6 


26 


47 


Yes 


3,500 


967 






























13,991 
21,728 




- 149 


1,994 


144 


5 


15 


33 


No 


17,922 


97(1 


9 


244 


25 





10 


17 


Yes 


595 


80 


4,672 


971 


56 


657 


44 




30 


36 


Yes 





8,746 


33,618 


97'' 


170 


■ 2,376 


170 


6 


50 


60 


Yes 


13,674 

2 r's 


30 069 


76,679 
17,087 
26,480 




30 


207 


19 


1 


14 


4 


No 


3,676 
5,900 


974 


238 


3,182 


250 





18 


34 


No 


13,596 


975 


136 
20 


1,122 
373 


131 

22 


4 



6 


24 
18 







4,449 


(-) 

9,496 




Yes 


2,000 


977 



' Called also Reception Hospital. 



' Open only between May 15 and September 15. 



182 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table a.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



NEW YOEK— Continued. 
Buffalo: 

B uflalo Eye and Ear Infirmary 

673 Mlcliigan street. 
Buffalo General Hospital 

100 High street. 
Buffalo Homeopathic Hospital 

74 Cottage street. 
Buffalo Hospital 

1833 Main street. 
Buffalo Woman's Hospital 

191 Georgia street. 
Charity Eye, Ear, and.Throat Hospital 

168 Broadway. 
Children's Hospital 

219 Bryant street. 
City Hospital for Women 

859 Humboldt parkway. 
Emergency Hospital '. 

108 Pine street. 
German Hospital 

736-740 Jefferson street. 
Quarantine Hospital 

770 East Ferry street. 
Railroad Y. M. C. A. Hospital 

1662 Broadway. 
Riverside Hospital 

115 Lafayette avenue. 
St. Mary's Maternity Hospital 

126 Edward street. 
University of Buffalo Dispensary 

24 High street. 
Cohoes: 

Cohoes Hospital 

225 Main street. 
Cooperstown: 

Thanksgiving Hospital 

Coming: 

Corning Hospital : 

93 East Erie avenue. 
Cortland: 

Cortland Hospital 

84 Main street. 
Dobbs Ferry: 

Dobbs Ferry Hospital 

Ashford avenue and Dudley street. 
Dunkirk: 

Brooks Memorial Hospital 

535 Central avenue. 
Elmira: 

Amot-Ogden Memorial Hospital 

Flushing: ' 

Hospital and Dispensary of the Town of Flushim;. 
Forest and Parsons avenues. 
Gabriels: 

Sanitarium Gabriels 

Geneva: 

Geneva City Hospital 

Glens Falls: 

Parks Hospital 

48 Park street. 
Gloversville: 

Nathan Littauer Hospital 

Herkjner: 

Htrkimer Emergency Hospital 

North Washington street. 

Hornellt ville: 

St. Jcmes Mercy Hospital 

Hudson: 

Hudsoii City Hospital 

Ithaca: 

City Hospital 

416 North Aurora street. 

Cornell Infirmary 

512 East State street. 
Jamaica, Long Island: 3 

Jamaica Hospital 

Mary Immaculate Hospital 

Ray street and Shelton avenue. 
Jamestown: 

Woman's Christian Association Hospital 

207 Foote cv.^nue. 

1 Number of cases treated 



Super\'ised and maintained by- 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity , 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

City of Buffalo 

Young Men's Christian Associatii 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity ■. 

University of Buffalo 



Private association . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private association . 
Private coi-poration . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 



Sisters ot Mercy 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Cornell University . . 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Order of St. Domini 



Private association . 



Classes of patients created. 



Eye and ear 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Abdominal and gynecological 

Eye, ear, throat, and nose 

All classes 

Gynecological, obstetrical, and surgical. 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Smallpox 

Injured railroad men 

All, e.xcept contagious 

Maternity 

All, except contagious and obstetrical. .. 
All, e.xcept contagious 



All classes. 
All classes . 



All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 



Consumptives . 

All classes 

All classes 



All, except chronic and contagious. 
All classes 



All classes 

All, e.xcept contagion 

AH classes 

University students . 



All, except contagious. 

All, except contagious. 
' Not reported. 



Year 
when 
found- 



1896 
1902 
1901 
1864 



1S97 
1898 
1597 

1S94 
1£03 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



183 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remauung 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 



Income from 
pay patients, 



2,662 
569 



1.5,300 
279 



20 
' Part of New York city. 



$2,000 
9,407 



5,626 
6,490 



500 
1,500 
8,494 
6,000 



32,000 

11,592 

247 



2,481 
1,947 
3,693 
3,815 
714 
4,185 
5,665 
4,000 
16,925 
3,431 
5,429 

4,477 



10,400 
13,678 



979 



981 



82,000 
81,292 
17,098 
58,000 
12,176 I 982 

2,361 983 
10,575 984 

3,647 1 985 
23,792 I 986 
19,877 I 987 

4,621 { 988 

2,256 

24,380 
171 

3,803 
6,451 
5,192 

3,195 997 
998 



992 



17,000 
16,850 
9,113 
7,915 

7,068 



5,300 
10,343 
17,570 
16,461 

9,692 
3,781 



1001 
1002 
1003 

1004 
1005 



1 Opened November 4, 1903. 



184 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



Supervised and maintained by- 



1 of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 
Liberty: 

Loomis Sanatorium and Annex 

Liberty Heights. 
Little FaUs: 

Little Falls Hospital ; 

610 East Monroe street. 
Lockport: 



1018 
1019 
1020 
1021 
1022 
1023 
1024 
1025 
1026 
1027 
1028 
1029 



Long Island City: ^ 

St. John's Long Island City Hospital 

Twelfth street and Jackson avenue. 
Matteawan: 

Highland Hospital 

Middleto^v^l: 

Thrall Hospital ' , 

Mineola, Long Island: 

Nassau Hospital 

Mt. Vemon: 

Mt. Vemon Hospital 



New RocheUe: 

New Rochelle Hospital . 
New York: 3 



135 East Fifty-fifth street. 



Bellevue Hospital 

Eact Twenty-sixth street. 



Catharine Mission Dispensary. 
24 Catharine slip. 



Cornell University Medical College Dispensary 

First avenue and Twenty-seventh street. 

Demilt Dispensary 

245 East Twenty-third street. 

Eclectic College Free Dispensary 

239 East Fourteenth street. 



Fordham Reception Hospital and Dispensary 

One hundred and ninetieth street and Aque- 
duct avenue. 

French Benevolent Society Hospital 

450-458 West Thirty-fourth street. 

General Memorial Hospital 

One hundred and sLxth street and Central Park, 
west. 



German Hospital and Dispensary 

East Seventy-seventh street and Park avenue. 
German Polyclinic 

78-80 Seventh street. 



Gouvemeur Reception Hospital 
Foot of Gouvemeur slip, 

Halmemann Hospital 

657 Park avenue. 

Harlem Dispensary 
108 Ei ■ " 



One hundred and twenty-eighth street. 

street 

Harlem Reception Hospital and Dispensary : 

533 East One hundred and twentieth street. 

I for Scarlet Fever and Diphtheria 

Foot of East Sixteenth street. 



Private corporation . 
Private association . , 

City of Lockport 

Sisters of St. Joseph. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation , 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation : 

City of New York 

Private corporation 

St. liichael's Protestant. Episcopal Church 

Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church 

Catharine Mission 

City of New York 

Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart 

Cornell University 

Private corporation 

Eclectic Medical College 

City of New York 

New York Homeopathic Medical CoUege- - . 
City of New York 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 
City of New York. . . . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
City of New York... 
Private corporation. 



Consumptives 

AH, except alcohoUc and contagious 

Emergency 

All, except contagious 

All, except chronic 

All, e.xcept contagious 

AU, except contagious 

AU classes 

All classes 

AU classes 

Children under 3 years 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor 

All sick poor, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes of sick poor 

AU classes of sick poor 

Maternity 

All, except insane, infectious, and alcohoUc 
AU classes of sick poor 

AU, except contagious 

Surgical 

AU classes 

AU classes 

All classes 

Sick and injured poor, except contagious.. 

AU, except contagious 

All classes 

Eye, ear, and throat 

Sick and injured poor 

Scarlet fever and diphtheria 



1 Not reported. 

2 Part of New York city. 

sincludes Manhattan and Bronx boroughs only; for data for other boroughs see Brooklyn, Casleton Corners, Flushing, Jamaica, Long Island City, New 
Brighton, Stapleton, and West New Brighton. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



185 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



1 

NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 
pay patients, 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




112 
6 
2 

141 

■ 16 

19 

. 18 

10 

7 
44 

. 816 

107 





63 
^350 

0) 

(«) 

17 
71 
37 

45 
38 

187 
<164 
^563 

65 

<59 
46 
18 


308 

107 

10 

1,906 

130 

361 

511 

337 

1,565 

210 

936 

< 22, 877 

28,925 

1,629 

4 3,197 

0) 

8,411 

1,142 

4 103,995 

(1) 

4 5,210 

261 

5,547 

870 
972 

3,832 

M9,263 

M 56, 029 

4,143 

784 

4 2,512 

4 24,960 

2,550 

136 


123 

2 

139 

7 
24 
27 
11 
79 
10 
46 

811 

•127 
0) 

744 

4 300 
(1) 

■131 
18 
61 
43 

64 
27 

196 

4 382 

4 653 

93 

37 

(1) 

4 76 

15 






4 




2 
3 



46 
10 





1 
21 

4' 







1 

7 

3 
4 

11 




8 




2 




(1) 

1 
15 
5 

10 
9 
12 

7 
4 

46 
125 

(') 

45 

6 
70 
55 

6 

2 
34 

9 

4 
8 

32 
31 
12 
12 
32 
12 

9 
12 

6 


5 

16 

11 
14 

31 

24 

174 
40 



60 

5 

2 

3 
39 

40 

62 

3 

26 
30 


12 
6 




SO 
1,200 


883,778 

963 

550 

2,703 

2,032 

5,723 

6,775 

2,530 

12,000 

2,755 

1,279 

1,500 



fi,084 

180 

776 



2,090 



3,322 

436 



12,512 



16,414 
41,318 

51,221 

5,438 

15,086 



32,865 

792 





14,885 


899,883 

3,180 

500 

43,718 

5,836 

9,000 

16,158 

9,896 

34,500 

7,315 

26,000 

3,000 

5 406,155 

65,485 

375 

1,473 

(') 

200,230 

17,291 

15,000 

15,000 

22,000 

(') 

49,885 
28.246 

22,144 
63,475 

107,460 
9,442 
23,045 
62, .556 
47,871 
2,603 








No 


1015 


Yes 


25,000 

500 
1,500 
3,987 
2,404 
14,000 

4,043 



1016 


No 








Yes 


1019 


Yes 




Yes. 


1021 


No 


1022 


Yes 




No. 


1024 


Yes 


1025 


Yes 


18,209 











No 


1028 


No 




Yes 


1030 


No 


6,500 





1031 


No 




No 


1033 


No 


1034 


No 




Yes 


5,000 


1036 


No 


1037 


No 


Q 




292 




1038 




Yes 


1039 


Yes 


1040 


No 


1041 


No 


1042 


No 







435 
220 




No 


1045 


No 


1046 


No 


1047 


Yes 












I Number of oases treated. 

' Includes Emergency Hospital, 223 East Twenty-sixth street. 



• Closed for alterations. 

' Included in Bellevue Hospital. 



186 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



lAME AND LOCATION. 



1072 
1073 
1074 
1075 
1076 
1077 
1078 
1079 
1080 
1081 
1082 
1083 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

New York— Continued. 

Hospital for the Relief of the Ruptured and Crippled . , . 
135 East Forty-second street. 

J. Hood AV right Memorial Hospital 

One hundred and thirty-first street and Amster- 
dam avenue. 
J ones Memorial Clinic and Amity Dispensary 

312 West Fifty-fourth street. 

Laura Franklin Free Hospital for Children 

17-19 East One hundred and eleventh street. 
Lebanon Hospital and Dispensary 

Westchester and Cauldwell avenues. 
Lincoln Hospital and Home 

East One hundred and forty-first street and 
Southern boulevard. 
Lying-in Hospital of the City of New York 

Second avenue and Seventeenth street. 
Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital 

103 Park avenue. 
Metropolitan Hospital 

BlackweUs Island. 
Metropolitan Hospital and Dispensary 

248 East Eighty-second street. 
Metropolitan Throat Hospital 

351 West Thirty-fourth street. 
Misericordia Hospital 

531 East Eighty-sixth street. 
Montefiore Home 

One hundred and thirty-eighth street and 
Broadway. 
Mt. Sinai Hospital and Dispensary 

Fifth avenue and One hundredth street. 
New Amsterdam Eye and Ear Hospital 

230 West Thirty-eighth street. 
New York City Children's Hospitals and Schools 

Randalls Island. 
New York Dispensary 

137 Centre street. 
New York Eye and Ear Clinic 

324 East Third street. 
New York Eye and Ear Infirmary 

218 Second avenue. 
New York Hospital 

7-23 West Fifteenth street. 
New York Infirmary for Women and Children 

5 LiviDgston place. 
New York Medical College and Hospital for Women 

17-19 West One himdred and first street. 
New York Ophthalmic and Aural Institute 

44-46 East Twelfth street. 
New York Ophthalmic Hospital 

201 East Twenty-third street. 
New York Orthopedic Dispensary and Hospital 

126 East Fifty-ninth street. 
New York Pasteur Institute 

313 West Twenty-third street. 

New York Polyclinic Hospital 

214-220 East Thirty-fourth street. 
New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital. 

303 East Twentieth street. 
New York Red Cross Hospital 

110 West Eighty-second street. 
New York Skin and Cancer Hospital 

Nineteenth street and Second avenue. 
Northeastern Dispensary 

222 East J' ifty-ninth street. 
Northern Dispensary 

Waverly place and Christopher street. 
Northwestern Dispensary 

Thii'ty-sixth street and Ninth avenue. 
Nursery and Child's Hospital 

571 Lexington avenue. 
Presbyterian Hospital in the City of New York 

41 Ea:st Seventieth street. 
Reception Hospital 

Foot of East Sixteenth street. 
Riverside Hospital 

North Brother Island. 

> Not reported. 



. and maintained by- 



Private corporation. 
Private i 



Amity Baptist Church 

Episcopal Sisters of St. Mary. 

Private association 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

City and county of New York. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Misericorde 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

City of New York 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

New York Bacteriological Institute . . . 

Private corporation 

University of the State of New York. . 

New York Red Cross Society 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private eoi-poration 

Society of the Presbyterian Hospital . 

City of New York 

City of New York 



Classes of patients treated. 



Ruptured and crippled . 



All classes 

All, except chronic and contagious . 

Acute ; 

AU, except contagious 



Maternity (destitute women) . 

Eye, ear. nose, and throat 

AU, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

Throat, nose, and ear 

Obstetrical 

AU chronic, except insane 



AU, except contagious 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

Sick, crippled, and idiotic destitute chUdren 

All classes 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

Eye and ear 

All acute, except contagious 

AU, except chronic, incurable, and conta- 
gious. 
Noncontagious (women and cMldren) 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

Eye, ear, and throat 

Orthopedic 

Persons bitten by rabid animals 

AU classes 

Acute noncontagious 

AU classes 

Skin and cancer 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes 

AU classes 

Women and children 

Acute and injured 

Contagious 

Contagious 

Number of cases treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



187 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



343 
2,455 
3,420 

1,97B 

2,563 

8,132 

213 



1,246 

3,381 

196 

293 

2 10,519 

2 27,826 

2 27,717 

532 

2,953 



IPO 


6 


1,456 


1,106 


14,071 


2 509 


18,392 


240 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Visiting. 



Amount ol an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
ftmds. 





2,221 



270 

5,744 



1,400 

4,606 

17,001 



ncome from 

>ay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 


817,091 


8106,636 


6,362 


33,957 


28 


115 





13,372 


12,611 


67,469 


5,306 


58,1.52 





110,826 


24,583 


46,790 





244,405 


3,500 


6,300 





1,200 


2,948 


22,152 


4,821 


69,589 


33,915 


151,748 


1,209 


6,162 





268,284 


11,018 


25,958 





2,500 


18,444 


77,599 


64,917 


224,339 


7,338 


47,599 


7,869 


19,455 


12, 954 


15, 784 


8,033 


25,925 


50,000 


40,000 


4,800 


7,600 


29,192 


39,878 


42,597 


115,574 


987 


4,874 


7,187 


22,202 


2,181 


4,734 


2,609 


6,895 





5,069 


5,188 


37,505 


63,837 


213,540 





16,000 





89,100 



188 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

New York— Continued. 

Roosevelt Hospital 

Ninth avenue and Fifty-eighth street. 
St. Andrew's Convalescent Hospital 

211-213 East Seventeenth street. 
St. Bartholomew's CUnic 

215-217 East Forty-second street. 
St. Chrysostom's Chapel Dispensary 

550 Seventh avenue. 
St. EUzaheth's Hospital 

415 West Fifty-first street. 
St. Francis Hospital 

603-617 Fifth street. 
St. Joseph's Hospital 

St. Ann avenue and East One hundred and forty- 
third street. 
St. Luke's Hospital and Dispensary 

Cathedral Heights. 
St. Mark's Hospital. ■. 

177-179 Second avenue. 
St. Mary's Free Hospital for Children 

405-411 West Thirty-fourth street. 
St. Vincent's Hospital 

Twelfth street and Seventh avenue. 
Sanitarium for Hebrew Children 

Rookaway Park, Long Island. 
Seton Hospital 

(Spuyten Duyvil.) 
Sloane Maternity Hospital 

Fifty-ninth street and Tenth avenue. 
Sydenham Hospital 

339-347 East One hundred and sixteenth street. 
Trinity Dispensary 

209 Fulton street. 
Trinity Hospital 

50 Varick street. 
Vanderbilt CUnic 

SLxtieth street and Amsterdam avenue. 
West Side German Dispensary 

328 West Forty-second street. 
WDkes Dispensary 

435 Ninth avenue. 
Willard Parker Hospital 

Foot of East Sixteenth street. 
Newburg: 

St. Luke's Home and Hospital 

1.53 Liberty street. 
Niagara Falls: 

Niagara Falls Memorial Hospital 

Eleventh street and Pine avenue. 
Nyack: 

Nyack Hospital 

Ogdensburg: 

Ogdeusburg Citv Hospital 

40 Kmg street. 
Olean: 

Olean General Hospital 

First and Colman streets. 
Onchiota: 

Stony Wold Sanatorium 

(Lake Kushaqua.) 
Oneida: 

Oneida Public Hospital 

Oneonta: 

Auretia Osbom Fox Memorial Hospital 

Ossining: 

Ossining Hospital 

28 Orchard street. 

Hospital 

Fourth and Schuyler streets. 
PeekskiU: 

PeekskiU Hospital 

Port Chester: 

Ladies' Hospital Association 

110 Smith street. 
Poughkeepsie: 

Vassar Brothers' Hospital 

Raybrook: 

New York State Hospital for Incipient Tuberculosis. . 
Rochester: 

Employees' Emergency Hospital 

524 Oxford street. 

1 Number of cases treated. 



Private corporation , 

Sisters of St. John Baptist 

Private corporation 

Trinity Parish (Protestant Episcopal) 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

St. Luke's Hospital Corporation 

Private association 

Episcopal Sisters of St. Mary 

Sisters of Charity 

Private coi-poration 

Sisters of Charity 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 

Trinity Church Association 

Trinity Church Association 

College of Physicians and Surgeons 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Mary (Episcopal) , 

City of New York , 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation .! 

Sisters of Chai-ity (Grey Nuns) 

Private coi-poratiou 

Private corporation 

City of Oneida 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

State of New York 

Employees' Emergency Hospital Associa 
tion of Boston. 

2 Not reported. 



All classes ; 

Convalescent women and children 

All classes of sick poor 

All, except diseases of the eye 

All, except contagious and insane 

All, except contagious and obstetrical. 
Consumptives 



All, except contagious 

Children between 2 and 14 years 

All, except contagious 

Sick children (summer months only) . 

Consumptives 

Maternity 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor 

.\11 classes of children 

Contagious 



1870 
1865 



1870 
1849 

1877 



1879 
1872 



1872 
1894 



All, except insane and contagious. 



.A.11, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious and mcurable. 

All classes 

Consumptive women and children . . . 



All, except contagious and infectious. 

AM. except contagious 

All classes 



All classes. 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 



All classes 

Consumptives (incipient only) 

Injured employees 

'Open between June 1 and October 1. 



1902 
1902 
1901 



1904 
1901 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



189 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
fimds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


December 31, 
1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




205 

10 

1161 



40 

370 

186 
45 
59 

224 

261 

24 

■ 134 

23 

1319 

123 
40 

20 

24 

28 
12 
30 
1 
4 
15 
17 
18 
9 

46 
6 


4,031 

255 

114,683 

196 

495 

2,559 

1,337 

2,997 

1,204 

1,135 

4,905 

3 1,513 

937 

1,511 

480 

11,615 

281 

1145,005 

126,639 

115,558 

1,362 

476 
539 
145 
685 
193 
98 
33 
188 
133 
199 
217 
142 

836 

82 

2,326 


171 
14 

146 

24 

251 

387 

190 
61 
81 

258 
(») 

326 
63 
26 

1502 

136 
54 

26 
40 
5 

12 
54 

1 
13 

6 
21 
16 

56 
82 
5 


16 

1 

0. 


„ 



12 
6 

10 
2 

4 
2 





7 





1 



1 








2 
3 

1 


15 

1 
60 

22 

35 
30 

30 
1 

4 
3 
14 

4 
110 

42 

8 

6 
12 
25 


12 

4 

5 

9 

1 

1 


77 
1 
5 

20 
30 
75 

30 
22 
40 

4 
16 
38 
24 


10 

4 

20 
17 
16 
4 
19 
5 
2 

6 

3 

18 

1 


Yes 


SO 




20,666 
57,589 



2,200 



5,000 

55,016 

10,679 









469 




884,375 

3,657 
100 
(2) 

6,428 
4,000 

66,586 
23,152 


67,121 



4,000 
716 

19,441 




6,595 
10,756 

2,021 
14,013 

3,945 

250 
2,252 

3,197 
1,914 
1,445 

501 
2,433 


8169,840 


1086 


No 


1087 






No 


100 
(=) 
28,021 
93,000 

194,518 
48,373 

76,172 
15,195 
63,420 
48,625 
15,000 
1,554 
10,000 
23,461 
5,ai3 
1,567 
53,000 

10,649 

15,805 

13,720 
5,114 

1,974 
5,822 
5,078 
5,342 
5,445 
5,827 

34,320 
2,. 533 


1089 




1090 


No 


1091 


No 


1092 


Yes 


1093 


Yes 


1094 




1095 


Yes 


1096 


No 


1097 




1098 


Yes 


1099 


Yes 


1100 






No 


1102 


No 


1103 




1104 


No 


1105 


No 


1106 


Yes 


2,000 
1,500 
1,000 


500 




1107 


Yes. 


1108 






Yes 


1110 


Yes 


1111 


No 


1112 


No 


1113 










103 

1,000 






Yes 


1115 


Yes 


1116 






No 


1118 






No. 


1120 


No 





1121 









' Opened October. 



' Opened July 15, 1904. 



190 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 3.— HOSPITALS AND 



Supervised and maintained 1 



i of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



NEW .YORK— Continued. 

Rochester— Continued. 

Hahnemann Hospital 

9 Rockingham street. 
Rochester City Hospital 

223 West avenue. 

Rochester Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary 

224 Alexander street. 

Rochester Municipal Hospital 

Waring road. 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Genesee street and West avenue. 
Rome: 

Rome Hospital 

110-114 East Garden street. 
Salamanca: 

Salamanca Hospital Association 

13 Main street. 
Saratoga Springs: 

Saratoga Hospital 

Harrison and Division streets. 
Schenectady: 

Ellis Hospital ; 

Stapleton, Staten Island: i 

United States Marine Hospital 

Suffem: 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

Syracuse: 

Hospital of the Good Shepherd ■ 

110 Marshall street. 
St. Joseph's Hospital 

Prospect and Union avenues. 
St. Mary's Infant and Maternity Hospital 

126 Spilng street. 
Syracuse City Hospital 

416 Teal avenue. 
Syracuse Free Dispensary 

506 South Wan-en street, 
Syracuse Homeopathic Hospital 

116 East Castle street. 
Syracuse Hospital for Women and Children 

1214 West Genesee street. 
Tarrytown: 

New York State Hospital for Crippled and Deformed 
Children. 

88 Paulding avenue. 
Tarrytown Hospital 

Wood court. 
Troy; 

Leonard Hospital 

Fourteenth street and Si.xth avenue. 
Marshall Infirmary 

Linden avenue. 

Samaritan Hospital and Dispensary 

Troy Hospital 

Eighth street. 
Troy Isolation Hospital 

Spring avenue. 
Utica: 

Faxton Hospital 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

172 Columbia street. 

St. Luke's Hospital 

Utica Dispensary 

214 Mary street. 
Utica General Hospital 

South and Mohawk streets. 
Utica Homeopathic Hospital 

684 Genesee street. 
Watertown: 

House of the Good Samaritan 

Pratt and Washington streets. 
St. Joachim's Hospital 

34 Stone street. 
West New Brighton: i 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

Westfield: 

Soule's Hospital 

White Plains: 

White Plains Hospital 

Yonkers: 

St. John's Riverside Hospital 

1 Part of New York city. = Number of cases ti 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
City of Rochester . . . 
Sisters of Charity . . . 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



United States Public Health and Mai-ine 
Hospital Service. 



Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation ; 

Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis. 

Sisters of Charity 

City of Syracuse 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Stateof New York. 



Private corporation. 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Thu-d Order of St. Francis. 



Protestant Episcopal churches of Utica. 
Private corporation 



City of Utica 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Siciters of Mercy 



Sisters of Charity . . . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



AU classes 

All classes 

All, e.xcept insane 

Consumptive and contagious . 
All classes 



Emergency . 
All classes . . 



All classes . 



Acute, noncontagious 

American merchant seamen . 



All , except contagious 

AU, except contagious and tubercular.. 

All, except insane and infectious 

Maternity 

Infectious 

All classes of sick poor 

All, except chronic and contagious 

All, except contagious 



1902 
1873 



Curable crippled and deformed . 



All, except contagious. 



All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 



All Ola 
All da 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor. 



All classes of sick poor 

All, except insane and contagious . 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 



All. except contagious. 

All classes 

All, except contagious. 



Private corporation . 



AM, except incurable and contagious. 



1872 
1873 
1895 



'Includes St. Elizabeth's Home. 



Includes St. Luke's Home. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



191 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



48 

5 Not reported. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



6,640 
10,546 



4,265 
10,000 



36,358 
32,957 



1,191 
13,064 
19,521 



4,817 
14,364 



22,810 
15,507 



3 9,273 
14,371 



13,234 
1,182 



2,050 
5 Opened November 26, 1903. 



812,227 


1122 


53,295 


1123 


46,901 


1124 


4,000 


1125 


33,494 


1126 


5,408 


1127 



16,504 


1130 


60,313 


1131 


4,111 


1132 


48,265 


1133 


42,1.53 


1134 


5,502 


1135 


3,000 


1136 


1,769 


1137 


6,456 


1138 


28,020 


1139 



12,079 
8,821 



192 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



1 of patients treated. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

Yonkers— Continued. 

St. Josepli's Hospital 

South Broadway and Vark street. 



Yonkers City Hospital. 



NORTH CAROLINA. 
Asheville: 

Mission Hospital 

Charlotte and Woodfln streets. 
Biltmore: 

Clarence Barker Memorial Hospital and Dispensary . 
Charlotte: 

Good Samaritan Hospital (colored) 



North Carolina Medical College Dispensary 

Presbyterian Hospital 

St. Peter's Hospital 

217 North Poplar street. 
Davidson: 

Davidson Hospital 

Durham: 

Lincoln Hospital 



423 Proctor street. 



Goldsboro: 

Goldsboro Hospital 

735 North John street. 
Greensboro: 

Graham Hospital 

Raleigh: 

Leonard Medical School Hospital ^ 

Comer Wilmington and Smithfield streets. 



West South street. 



Rocky Mount: 

Atlantic Coast Line Hospital. 
Southern Pines: 

Pickf ord Sanitarium 

Tarboro: 

Pittman Hospital 



Fowle Memorial Hospital . 



WiLmington: 

James Walker Memorial Hospital 

Tenth and Red Cross streets. 
United States Marine Hospital 



Winston-Salem: 

Slater Hospital 

Twin City Hospital . 



NORTH DAKOTA. 
Bismarck: 

St. Alexius Hospital 

Sixth and Main streets. 
Fargo: 

St. John's Hospital 

Island Park. 
Fort Yates: 

Agency Hospital 

Grafton: 

Grafton Deaconess Hospital 

Grand Forks: 

Grand Forks Deaconess Hospital . . . 
Lisbon: 

Lisbon Hospital 

MayvUle: ' 

MayviUe Union Hospital 

Northwood: 

Northwood Deaconess Hospital 



OHIO. 
Akron: 

City Hospital of Akron 

AlUance: 

AUiance Hospital 

1 Not reported. 



Sisters of Charity . 



City of Yonkers 

Private corporation . 



Contagious 

Women and children. 



Private corporation . 



All Souls Protestant Episcopal Church 

B of North 



North Carolina Medical College 

Presbyterian churches of Charlotte. 
St. Peter's Episcopal Parish 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation. 



All, except contagious and infectious 

AU, except insane, incurable, and conta- 
gious. 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

AU, except insane, contagious, and incura- 
ble. 

AU classes 

All classes 

AU, except contagious 



An( 



Private corporation 

American Baptist Home Mission Society. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



All classes 

AU classes 

All, except contagious and insane. 



Atlantic Coast Line ReUef Department. . 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Ladies' Hospital Society 

Private corporation 



RaUway employees — 

Consumptives 

All classes 

AU, except contagious. 
AU classes 



1901 
1904 
1901 



United States Public Health and Marine American merchant seamen . 
Hospital Service. 



Sisters of St. Benedict. 
Sisters of St. Joseph. . . 



United States Government 

United Norwegian Lutheran Church. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Union Hospital Society 

United Norwegian Lutheran Church . 

Akron Hospital Association 



Reformed Church 

2 Open only between October and May. 



All classes . 
All classes . 



Indians 

AU classes 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious. 
AU, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 

AU, except contagious. 



AU, except contagious and insane 

Open only between October and AprU. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



193 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 
pay patients, 



■• Opened August, 1904. 
30952—05 13 



' Temporarily closed. 



■ Opened July 1, 1904. 



3 18 

3,557 



S19,735 
500 



i,200 
1.500 



1,200 


1172 


3 600 


1173 


6,405 


1174 


2,760 


1175 



4,200 


1178 


) 


1179 


17,394 


1180 


11,185 


1181 


1,400 


1182 


4,993 


1183 



2,765 
Opened June 1, 1903. 



24,581 


1185 


1,400 


1186 


) 


1187 


9,164 


1188 


) 


1189 


1,100 


1190 


2,100 


1191 


13,457 


1192 


4,000 


1193 



194 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes o( patients treated. 



OHIO— Continued. 
Ashtabula: 

Ashtabula General Hospital 

Cambridge: 

Cambridge Hospital : 

Canal Dover: 

Tuscarawas Hospital 

Canton: 

Aultman Hospital 

325 South Clarendon avenue. 
Chillicothe: 

Chillicothe Emergency Hospital 

207 Bridge street. 
Cincinnati : 

Bethesda Hospital 

Oak street and Reading road. 

Christ's Hospital 

2139 Auburn avenue. 

Cincinnati Branch Hospital 

Cincinnati Eye, Nose, Throat, and Ear Hospital and 
Dispensary. 

122 East Twelfth street. 
Cincinnati Hospital 

Twelfth street. 
Episcopal Hospital for Children 

(Mt. Auburn ) 
German Deaconess Hospital 

Clifton avenue and Straight street. 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

Jewish Hospital 

(Avondale.) 
Ohio Hospital for Women and Children 

549 West Seventh street. 
Oliio MateiTiity Hospital 

529-533 East Liberty street. 
Ophthalmic Hospital and Dispensary 

208-210 West Twelfth street. 
Presbyterian Hospital 

626 West Sixth street. 
Pulte Homeopathic Hospital 

Seventh and Mound streets. 
St. Francis' Hospital 

Queen City avenue. 
St. Joseph's Maternity Hospital 

(Norwood.) 
St. Mary's Hospital 

Betts and Linn streets. 
Seton Hospital 

040 West Eighth street. 
United States Marine Hospital 

Cleveland : 

Cleveland City Hospital ^ 

Scranton avenue. 
Cleveland Detention Hospital 

Canal road. 
Cleveland General Hospital and Dispensary 

274 Woodland avenue. 
Cleveland Homeopathic Hospital 

66 Huron street. 
Deaconess Hospital 

101 University street. 
German Hospital 

385 FrankUn avenue. 
Good Samaritan Dispensary 

62 Huron street. 
Lakeside Hospital 

Lake street. 
Lutheran Hospital 

247 FrankUn avenue. 
Maternity Hospital 

134 East Prospect street. 
Mt. Sinai Hospital 

173 Forest street. 
St. Alexis Hospital 

1.507 Broadway. 
St. Ann's Lying-in Hospital 

605 'VVoodlawn avenue. 
St. Clair's Hospital 

1354 St. Clair street. 

1 Opened July 1, 1904. 

2Not reported. 

3 Opened November 27, 1903. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 



German Methodist Church. 



City of Cincinnati. . . 
Private corporation . 



City of Cincinnati 

Episcopal Church of southern Ohio. 
Evangelical Protestant Society 



Sisters of Charity . . 
Private association. 



Private corporation 

Evangelical Protestant Society. . . 

Private corporation 

Presbyterian Church 

Pulte Medical College 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis . 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. . 
Sisters of Charity 



City of Cleveland . 
City of Cleveland. 



Cleveland College of Physicians and Sur- 
geons. 
Private corporation 



Missionary Society, Light and Hope 

Reformed churches of Cleveland 

Cleveland Homeopathic Medical College. 

Private consoration 

Lutheran Church 

Private corporation 

Jewish Woman's Hospital Society 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 



Medical and surgical . . . 
All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 

All, except contagious. 



All classes 

All, except chronic and contagious. 



AU classes 

AU, except infectious . 
All classes 



All classes 

All, e.xcept contagious. 



Women and cliildren 

Eye and ear 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

AU, except contagious 

Obstetrical 

All, except contagious 

AU, e.xcept contagious 

American merchant seamen . 



All classes of Indigent sic".; 

Smallpox 

All classes . . .■ 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

Acute 

AU classes 

Maternity 

AU, except contagious and obstetrical. . 

AU, except infectious, maternity, and 

sane. 
Obstetrical 

All classes 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



195 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from Total cost of 
pay patients, i maintenance, 



267 



5 12,000 

2,431 

236 

67 



23,047 
20,000 



17,687 

2,913 

2,359 

200 

14,999 



21,609 
32,064 



1,500 
3,893 
11,000 
»7,.597 



5750 
9,500 



174,068 
10,600 
20,774 

40, 615 
5,185 
3,749 



9,245 
14, 672 



3,000 

7,473 

30,260 

> 15, 735 



1194 
1195 
1196 



1199 

1200 

1201 
1202 



1204 
1205 



1206 
1207 



1210 
1211 
1212 
1213 
1214 
1215 
1216 
1217 



1220 
1221 
1222 
1223 
1224 
1225 
1226 
1227 
1228 
1229 
1230 
1231 



' Opened January 1, 1905. 
Included in St. Joseph's 



[nfant Asylum. 



! Includes Children's Hospital and Tuberculosis Sanitarium. 
'Includes St. Arm's Infant Asylum. 



196 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



OHIO— Continued. 

Cleveland— Continued. 

St. Jolin's Hospital 

1191 Detroit street. 

St. Vincent's Charity Hospital 

Perry street and Central avenue. 

United States Marine Hospital 

371 Lake street. 

West Side Cottage Dispensary 

78 Hicks street. 
Women's and Children's Free Dispensary 
16 Webster street. 
Columbus : 

Children's Hospital 

Fair and MUler streets. 

Grant Hospital 

, 125 South Grant avenue. 

Hartman Sanitarium 

247 South Fourth street. 

Hawkes Hospital of Mt. Carmel 

State and Davis streets. 

Lawrence Hospital ; 

423 East Town street. 

Mercy Hospital 

1430 South High street. 
Ohio Medical University Free Dispensary . 
Park street. 

Protestant Hospital 

North Park street. 

St. Anthony's Hospital 

Mann street and Taylor avenue. 

St. Francis Hospital 

Sixth and State streets. 
Starling Medical College Free Dispensary. 
317 East State street. 
Dayton: 

Miami Va,Uey Hospital 

Apple and MagnoUa streets. 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

(Edgemont.) 
Findlay: 

Findlay Hospital 

GalUpoIis: 

Ohio Hospital for EpUeptics 

Hamilton: 

Mercy Hospital 

116 Dayton street. 
Ironton: 

Charles S. Gray Deaconess Hospital 

Kenton: 

Antonio Hospital 

Lima: 

Lima Hospital 

705 East Market street. 
Lorain: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Peniield avenue. 
Mansfield : 

Emergency Hospital of Mansfield 

43-47 Park avenue west. 
Newark: 

City Hospital 

154 Hudson avenue. 
PauiesvUle: 

Painesville Hospital 

Sandusky: 

Providence Hospital 

Springfield: 

Mitchell-Thomas Hospital 

Clifton and York streets. 
Steuben vUle: 

Gill Hospital 

Toledo: 

Emergency Hospital and Free Dispensary 
218 Superior street. 

Maternity Hospital 

1609 Summit street. 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

2213 Cherry street. 

Toledo Dispensary , 

1107 Broadway. 

Toledo Hospital 

1711 Cherry street. 

1 Opened January 16, 1904. 



Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis.. 
Sisters of Charity 

United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 

Deaconess Home of the Methodist Episco- 
pal Church. 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Holy Cross 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Ohio Medical University 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

Starling Medical College , . 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

State of Ohio 

Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Volunteers of America 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Wabash Employees' Hospital Association . 
Private corporation 

2 Number of cases treated. 



All classes 

All, except incurable 
American merchant i 

Women and children 

Women and children 

Children under 15 years 

All classes 

Chronic 

AU classes 

Women, and abdominal diseases of both 

All classes ■ 

All classes of sick poor 

AU, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Acute 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Epileptics and epileptic insane 

All, except contagious. 

All classes , 

All classes , 

AU, except contagious , 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious and infectious 

AU classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

AU classes 

All classes 

Obstetrical 

All classes 

RaUway employees 

All classes 

3 Not reported. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



197 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 
pay patients. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




42 
100 
45 

2 12 

30 
45 
20 
50 
15 
15 
2 25 
51 
196 
120 
2 75 

84 
301 

917 
15 
4 

IG 
36 
5 

7 

17 
18 

20 

87 



716 

1,710 

390 

2150 

2 5,576 

155 

791 

163 

811 

234 

65 

2 4,500 

1,363 

975' 

1,290 

2 705 

1,428 
2,115 
181 
207 
190 
95 
92 
444 
421 
94 
82 

34 
190 
(') 

259 

125 
1,273 
(8) 

1,599 


85 
42 


2 14 

19 
45 
16 
50 
10 

232 
47 

154 
96 

2 78 

83 
304 

10 
997 

5 

13 

25 

4 

17 
(?) 

20 

74 
(') 

61 


7 
3 




5 
2 


3 


11 


2 


6 














3 
1 
2 
2 


14 
8 

5 

15 

20 
16 
17 
14 
22 
5 
5 
22 

15 

14 
20 
48 

(') 

14 
11 

30 
36 

10 

17 



125 


16 
36 
4 
1 


6 
27 
10 
28 
12 

4 

32 
38 
30 


30 
49 
5 
51 

3 

4 
10 

3 

2 
2 

7 

26 

40 


No 


$0 



S6,000 

27,967 



w 

157 

400 
31,279 
24,539 
17,300 
3,429 
1,200 

20,000 
7,840 
4,300 


15,000 

2,000 

2,653 
1,909 
1,000 
5,845 
5,308 
500 
2,411 

(■») 
(°) 

1,390 

7,590 
(") 

500 

20, 178 



29,330 


512,000 
31,052 
18,050 

900 

5,500 
32,869 
29,469 
17, 150 

2,844 

2,200 

600 

28,000 

10,655 

9,219 
687 

39,000 
11,900 
5,000 
163, 104 
5,583 
2,400 
1,200 

5,038 
1,750 
3,600 

{') 

5,510 

C-) 

24,000 

19, 277 

945 

22,373 


1232 


Yes 


]233 


No 





















4,500 
5,700 
2,000 




No. . 


1236 


No 








Yes 


1239 


Yes 


1240 


Yes 








No 


1243 


Yes 


1244 






No 


1246 


No 


1247 






No 


1249 


Yes 


1250 


No 


1251 




900 





600 
1,280 







500 











No 


1254 


Yes 


1255 


Yes 


1256 






Yes 


1258 


No 








Yes 


1261 


Yes 


1W2 




1''63 


No 


1264 


Yes 


1265 




1266 




1?67 







' Opened July 8, 1904. 



' Opened April 5, 1904. 



i Opened Jime 1, 1904. 



198 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



OHIO— Continued. 



Toledo— Continued. 

Toledo Pesthouse. 
Upton I 
Youngstown: 

Mahoning Valley Hospital. 



Zanesville: 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

Laurel and Myrtle avenues. 



OKLAHOMA. 
Hospital 



OREGON. 
Astoria: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Fifteenth and Duane streets. 



Pendleton: 

St. Anthony's Hospital 

Portland: 

Chinese Free Dispensary 

350 Fourteenth street. 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

Twenty-third and Lovejoy streets. 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

Twenty-fiith and Glisan streets. 
Salem : 

Salem Hospital 



PENNSYLVANIA. 



egheny: 
AUegh. 



Uegheny General Hospital. 



100-110 Stockton avenue. 
Presbyterian Hospital of Pittsburg and Allegheny . 

1101 Ridge avenue. 
St. John's General Hospital. 

McClure avenue. 
United Presbyterian Memorial Hospital 

Roberts and Monterey streets. 
AUentown: 

Allentown Hospital 

Seventeenth and Chew streets. 
Altoona: 

Altoona Hospital 



Hospital and Sanitarium 



Bellefonte: 

Bellefonte Hospital 

Water and Willowbank streets. 
BerUn: 

Workingmen's Hospital 



Bradford: 

Bradford Hospital 

Bryn Mawr: 

Bryn Mawr Hospital 

Butler: 

Butler County General Hospital 

South Main street and Plank road. 
Carbondale: 

Carbondale Emergency Hospital 

CarUsle: 

Todd Hospital 

F and West streets. 



Chester: 

Chester Hospital 

Ninth and Barclay streets. 
Clearfield: 

Clearfield Hospital 

Coatesville: 

Coatesville Hospital 

Columbia: 

Columbia Hospital 

1 Not reported. 



City of Toledo 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Presbyterian Church 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Charity 

Willamette University 

Private corporation 

Presbyterian Church 

Private corporation 

United Presbyterian Woman's Association, 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Berlin Hospital Association 

State of Pennsylvania .■ 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

Children's Aid Society of Franklin county 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation , 

Number of cases treated. 



Smallpo-x 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious and incurable 

All, except contagious. 

All, except contagious' , 

All classes , 

All, except contagious , 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor 

All. except contagious 

Acute 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of women and children 

All, except chronic, contagious, and insane 
All, except contagious and obstetrical 

All, except chronic, insane, contagious, and 
alcoholic. 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

Injured persons 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Injured persons 

All, except contagious. 

All, except contagious 

All, except chronic and contagious 

All classes 

AU classes 

All, except contagious 

3 Opened August, 1903. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



199 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



374 
1,294 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from Total cost of 
~pay patients, ■ maintenance, 
1903. 



4,000 



65, 410 

15,625 

19, 147 

100 

6,392 



1,107 
6,848 
12,329 
6,069 



1271 
1272 



1275 
1276 
1277 
1278 
1279 



21,342 
24,001 
2,750 



10, .337 
23,054 



1290 
1291 
1292 
1293 



8,127 1294 
2,159 ! 1295 

3,000 ,' 1296 
1297 



' Included in Children's Orphan Home. 



' Opened August 29, 



200 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 
Connellsville: 

Cottage State Hospital 

Corry: 

Corry Hospital 

Du Bois: 

Du Bois Hospital 

26 West Scribner avenue. 
Easton: 

Easton Hospital and Dispensary 

656 Wolf street. 
Erie; 

Hamot Hospital 

Municipal Hospital 

Second street and East avenue. 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

Twenty-fourth and Sassafras streets. 
Fountain Springs: 

State Hospital for Injured Persons of the Anthracite 
Coal Regions. 
Franklin: 

Franklin Hospital 

Greensburg: 

Westmoreland Hospital 

Harrisburg': 

Harrisburg Hospital 

Front and Mulberry streets. 

Harrisburg Maternity Hospital 

226 Liberty street. 
Hazelton: 

State Hospital for Injured Persons of the Middle Coal 
Field. 
Johnstown: 

Cambria Hospital 

Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospital 

Municipal Hospital 

Kane: 

Kane Summit Hospital 

Kittarming: 

Kittanning General Hospital 

Lancaster: 

Lancaster General Hospital 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Lebanon:' 

Good Samaritan Hospital 

Fourth and Walnut streets. 
Lock Haven: 

Lock Haven Hospital 

McKees Rocks: 

McKees Rocks General Hospital , 

McKeesport: 

McKeesport Hospital ^ 

Fifth and Evans avenues. 
Meadville: 

MeadviJle City Hospital 

Spencer Hospital 

Mercer: 

Cottage State Hospital 

Monongahela: 

Monongahela Memorial Hospital 

Montalto: 

South Mountain Camp Sanatorium 

Mt. Pleasant: 

Memorial Hospital 

New Brighton: 

Beaver Valley General Hospital 

Newcastle: 

Shenango VaUey Hospital 

Beaver street and Lincoln avenue. 
Norristown: 

Charity Hospital of Montgomery County 

" Basin and Powell streets. 
Oil City: 

OU City Hospital and Training School for Nurses , 

Philadelphia: 

Bethany Dispensary 

2219 Bainbridge street. 

Blue Cross Medical Aid Dispensary 

1.502 North Marshall street. 

Charity Hospital Dispensary 

17.31 Vine street. 

Children's Homeopathic Hospital 

Franklm and Thompson streets. 

1 Not reported. ' 



State of Pennsylvania. 

Private corporation . . . 

Private corporation . . . 

Private corporation . . . 

Private corporation . . . 
City of Erie 



Sisters of St. Joseph . 



State of Pennsylvania- 



Private corporation. . . 
Private corporation . . . 
Private corporation . . . 
Private corporation. . . 
State of Pennsylvania. 



Cambria Steel Company. 

Private corporation 

City of Johnstown 



Private corporation. . . 
Private corporation. . . 



Private corporation. 
Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



State of Pennsylvania. 
Private corporation . . . 
State of Pennsylvania- 
Private corporation . - - 
Private corporation . . . 
Private corporation - . . 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Bethany Church 

Blue Cross Medical Aid of Philadelphia - 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Opened April, 1903. 



Injured persons in the bitumi: 
semibituminous coal regions. 



All, e-xcept chronic and contagious . 



All classes 

Smallpox, scarlet fever, and diphtherii 

All, except contagious 



All classes - 
All classes - 
-A.11 classes - 
Maternity - 



Injured railroad men and steel workers , 

All. except insane and contagious 

Smallpox 



All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 



All classes . 
All classes. 



All, except contagious and chronic . 



All, except contagious. 
.A.11, except contagious. 
AU, except contagious. 



All classes. 
All classes. 



All classes 

All classes 

Consumptives 

Medical and surgical 

All classes 

All classes 



All classes 

All, except tubercular and incurable 

All classes 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes of sick poor 

Children under 14 years, and emergency 
cases. 

3 Individual self maintenance. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



201 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



On January 1, Admitted dur- t^^^^§ 
lonj ing 1904. i™04 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 

Training school nual subsidy 

for nurses. ' from public 



84,000 
2,500 



5,111 
7,500 



Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 



9,452 



1,994 

7,281 

5,513 

125 



5,861 
1,114 



2,538 
5,429 



5,225 
3,748 



4,000 
2,857 



4,146 
12,408 



22,542 
500 



1309 
1310 

22,245 1311 
700 1312 

21,000 I 1313 



10,768 
24, 941 



10, 616 
2,714 



11,066 
6,845 



11,000 
8,207 



22,546 
13,005 
14,099 



• Opened January 21, 1904. 



= Number of cases treated. 



202 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



1340 
1341 
1342 
1343 
1344 

1345 
1346 
1347 
1348 
1349 
1350 
1351 
1352 
1353 
1354 
1355 
1356 
1357 
1358 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 

Philadelphia — Continued. 

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia 

207 South Twenty-second street. 



Frederick Douglas Memorial Hospital and Training 
School. 

1512 Lombard street. 



Gynecian Hospital 

245-247 North Eighteenth street. 
Hahnemann Medical College Hospital 

North Fifteenth and North Broad streets. 
Henry Phipps Institute 



Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church. . . 

Front street and Leliigh avenue. 
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania 

3400 Spruce street. 
House of Mercy 

411 Spruce street. 
Howard Hospital and Infirmary for Incurables . 

Broad and Catherine streets. 



Jewish Hospital 

York pike and Tabor road. 

Jewish Maternity Hospital 

532-534 Spruce Street. 



Pennsylvania Hospital 

Eighth and Spruce streets. 



Philadelphia Hospital 

Thii-ty-fourth and Pine streets. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Christian League 

Protestant Episcopal Church. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Classes of patients treated. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Henry PMpps 



Protestant Episcopal Church. 
University of Pennsylvania. . . 



Philadelphia Orthopedic Hospital and Infirmary for 
Nervous Diseases. 

Seventeenth and Siunmer streets. 
Philadelphia Polyclmic and College for Graduates in 
Medicine. 

1818 Lombard street. 
Presbvterian Hospital m Philadelphia 

51 North Thii'ty-ninth street. 
Preston Retreat 

Twentieth and Hamilton streets. 

1 Number of cases treated. 



Private corporation 

Jefferson Medical College 

Jefferson Medical College 

Church of the Covenanters 

Jewish Hospital Association of Philadelphia 

Jewish Maternity Association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

City of Philadelphia 

Private coi-poration 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

City and county of Philadelphia 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 



Private corporation . 



Presbyterian Church . 
Private corporation . . 
Opened July, 1903. 



Cliildren under 12 years 

All classes of sick children 

Chinese 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except incurable and contagious 

All classes 

Gynecological 

All classes 

Destitute consumptives 

Female consumptives 

AU, except contagious and insane 

Male consumptives 

All classes 

Maternity 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Women and children 

Gynecological 

Eye and ear 

Obstetrical 

All, except contagious . . .^ 

AU classes 

All classes 

Contagious 

All classes of sick poor 

All, except chronic and contagious 

AU classes 

Ear, eye, nose, and throat 

All classes 

Women and their infants 

Nervous and deformed 

All, except contagious 

AU, except contagions. Infectious, and in 

sane. 
Maternity 

^ Opened February 1. 1903. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



203 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OP PATIENTS. 



On January 1, Admitted dur- 
1904. ing 1904. 



1,737 
1,100 



^6,054 
1352 



111,614 

4,305 

'31,741 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



42 ' Yes. 
5 I Yes. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 







4,500 

' 

4,000 



30,000 







2,500 



2,500 

30,000 



6,2o0 
4,714 





7,225 
56,498 



853 
19, 647 



10,346 



618 

14,481 

14,032 

1,556 



1,242 



2,617 
2,559 
15,872 

10,539 



S36, 700 

12,500 

100 



104,500 
41,848 
17, 094 
89, 248 

15,000 

134,368 

200,374 

6,000 

24,271 



6 60,013 

7,341 

18, 500 

100 

5,579 

83,054 

45,879 

3,552 

84,000 

4,237 

135, 184 

6,950 

540 

182, 672 

14,820 

39, 591 



105, 400 
10, 000 



I Also, 21,438 out-patients. 



' Includes Lucian Moss Home for Incurables. 



204 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2,— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION, 



Supervised and maintained by- 



of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



1377 
1378 
1379 



1400 
1401 
1402 
1403 
1404 
. 1405 
1406 
1407 
1408 
1409 
1410 

1411 
1412 



PENNSYLVANIA— Contiaued. 

Philadelphia— Continued . 

Pi-ince of Peace Hospital (maternitj') 

1315 North Marshall street. 



St. Chi-istopher's Hospital for Children. 
St. Joseph's Hospital 



Gii-ard avenue and Sixteenth street. 



Private corporation . . 

Private corporation . . 

Sisters of St. Francis. 

Private corporation . . 
Sisters of Charity 



St. Timothy's Memorial Hospital and House of Mercy. 
Ridge avenue and Jamestown street ( Roxboro) . 



United States Naval Hospital 

Twenty-fourth and Fitzwater streets. 

West Philadelphia Hospital for Women 

4035 Parrish street. 



AVoman's Homeopathic Hospital 

Twentieth street and Susquehanna ave 



Woman's Southern Homeopathic Hospital. 
724 Spruce street. 



PhoenixvQle; 

Phoenixville Hospital. 
Pittsburg: 



Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital and Dis- 
iry. 
408 Second avenue. 



Pittsburg Hospital for Children 

Forbes avenue and McDevitt place. 
Reineman Hospital 

Millwood avenue. 



Western Pennsylvania Hospital 
Twenty-eighth street. 
Pittston: 

Pittston Hospital 

Pottstown: 

lital 



North CTiarlotte street. 



Reading: 

Homeopathic Hospital 

135 North Sixth street. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

Salvation Army 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Union Mission Hospital Corporation. 



United States Bureau of Medicine and 

Surgery. 
Private corpora tion , 



Board of Directors of City Trusts. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



State of Pennsylvania. 
Private corporation . . . 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation . . , 
Private corporation . . . 



Sisters of Mercy 

City of Pittsburg 

Institution of Protestant Deaconesses. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 



Rochester and Pittsburg Coal and Iron 
Company. 



Private corporation 

1 Number of cases treated. 



Unfortunate women . . . 

Consumptive poor 

AU, except contagious. 



All, except contagious 

All, except chronic and contagious . 



All classes 

All classes ■. .. 

AU classes 

Unfortmiate women. . . 
All, except contagious. 

All classes 

All classes 



Officers and enUsted men of the I.'nited 

States Navy and Marine Corps. 
All classes of women and children 



with diseases of the eye . , 

All classes of women and children, and in- 
jured men. 
All, except contagious 



Injured miners and other surgical cas 
AU, except contagious and incurable. 

All classes 

Eye, ear, nose, and throat 

All, except contagious 



AU classes 

Contagious 

AU. except contagious and infectious. 

All cla sses of sick poor 

Children under 12 years 

Maternity and gynecological 

All classes 

All, except contagious and incurable . 
All, except incurable and alcohoUc. . . 
All, except contagious 



All, except contagious, incurable, and ; 
temity. 



AU, except chronic and contagious. 
All classes 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



205 



DISPENSAEIES— Continued. 



NtrUBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



120 

293 

2,103 

940 
2,070 



1,189 
■8,092 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NtJMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



A™o™t o^.^"- Income from 
n^^^St? pay patients, 



5,000 
7,176 



4,500 
10, 750 



7,500 




9,400 
12, 500 
2,500 



81,800 
2, 237 
22,528 



57,862 
7,256 
10,457 



4,427 
16, 460 
2,320 

496 
3,557 

12, 000 
3,097 

19,000 

65, 580 



4,603 
2,379 



Total cost of 
maintenance. 



$3,500 


1377 


15,749 


1378 


47,870 


1379 


16, 159 


1380 


68, 189 


1381 


18,535 


1382 


44,593 


1383 


17,942 


1384 


2,500 


1385 


26,483 


1386 



40, 274 


1389 


18, 109 


1390 


22, 166 


^391 


17,504 


1392 


47,474 


1393 


. 4,320 


1394 


8,317 


1395 


13,719 


1396 


10,800 


1397 


10,331 


1398 


'57,000 


1399 


96, 188 


1400 


20,000 


1401 


32,460 


1402 


2,638 


1403 


10, 000 


1404 


5, 206 


1405 


48,481 


1406 


31,672 


1407 


86,488 


140S 


7,262 


1409 


9,013 


1410 


24, 808 


1411 


18,666 


1412 


6,548 


1413 



206 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 3.— HOSPITALS AND 



1437 
1438 
1439 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



PENNSYLVANIA -Continued. 

Reading— Continued. 

Reading Hospital 

Front and Spring streets. 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

1215 Walnut street. 
Ridgway: 

Elk County General Hospital 

Roaring Spring: 

Nason Hospital 

Rochester: 

Beaver County General Hospital 

Pumey and Kentucky streets. 
Sayre: 

Robert Packer Plospital 

Scranton: 

Free Dispensary for Diseases ol the Lungs 

203 Linden street. 

' Halmemann Hospital 

310 Monroe avenue. 

Moses Taylor Hospital 

State Hospital ol the Northern Anthracite Coal Region 
West Mountain Sanatorium 

West Side Hospital 

Jackson street and Bromley avenue. 
Sharon: 

Christian H. Buhl Hospital 

East State street. 
South Bethlehem: 

St. Luke's Hospital 

Sunbury: 

Mary M. Packer Hospital 

Titusvaie: 

Titusville Hospital 

Turtle Creek: 

Turtle Creek Municipal Hospital 

Unlontown: 

LTniontown Hospital 

Upland: 

J. Lewis Crozpr Homeopathic Hospital 

Warren: 

Warren Emergency Hospital 

Washington: 

Washington Hospital 

34 Acheson avenue. 
West Chester: 

Chester County Hospital 

White Haven: 

Free Hospital for Poor Consumptives 

WUkesbarre: 

Mercy Hospital 

186 Hanover street. 

WUkesbarre City Hospital 

WUhamsport: 

Williamsport Hospital 

Campbell and Louisa streets. 
York: 

York Hospital and Dispensary 

West College avenue. 

RHODE ISLAND. 
Newport: 

Newport Hospital 

1.5 Friendship street. 
United States Naval Hospital 

Pawtucket: 

Pawtucket Dispensary 

Pawtucket General and Emergency Hospital 

Providence: 

Channing Hospital 

73 Common street. 
Free Dispensary 

117 Brook street. 
North End Dispensary 

49 Orms street. 
Providence Lving-in Hospital 

95 State street. 
Rhode Island Hospital 

593 Eddy street. 

1 Not reported. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private corporation 

Sisters ol the Tliird Order of St. Francis. 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Private coqjoration . 



Scranton Society for the Prevention and 

Cure of Consumption. 
Private corporation 



Private coi-poration 

State of Pennsylvania 

Scranton Society for the Prevention and 

Cure of Consumption. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

Borough of Turtle Creek 

Private coi-poration 

Tiiistees of J. Lewis Crozer endowment. 

Private coi-poration 

Private Association 



Classes of patients treated. 



All classes 

All, except contagious - 



All classes . 
All classes. 
All classes . 



All classes 

Consumptives 

All, except contagii 



All, except contagious and insane 

Injured miners and other emergency ( 
Consumptives 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



18fi7 
1873 

1902 
1896 



1871 
1903 



All. except contagious. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Sisters of Mercy . - . . . 
Private corporation . 
Private corjjoration . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 



United States Bureau of Medicine and Sur- 
gery. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



All, except contagious and venereal. . 

All classes 

Smallpox 

AU, except contagious and incurable. 

All, except contagious 

All. except contagious 

All classes 



Consumptives. 

All classes 

AU classes 

All classes 



187^ 
1873 



All classes . 



All, except mental and alcohohc 1873 



All classes of sick poor. 



All, except contagious 

Neuropaths 

All classes of women and children 



Private corporation 

W. Lincoln Bates, M. D 

North End Working Girls' Club 

t 
Private conwration Infant and obstetrical 

Private corporation ' j All, except obstetrical and smallpox . 

2 Number of cases treated. 



1900 
1901 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



207 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



JUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



1,141 
1,240 



2 51 
2,164 



'■ 4.55 



Remaining 

December al, 

1904. 



344 
4,038 
3 Opened August 3, 1903, 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



I Amount of an- 
Number of ! Training school nual subsidy 
for nurses. from public 

funds. 



I Opened December 



Yes... 
No... 
No... 
Yes... 
Yes... 
I, 1903. 



4,000 
3,000 



3, 750 





2,500 
6, 000 
10, 000 
4,000 
2,142 



4,500 
2,343 



13,250 
12,500 



S5, 302 
7,137 



1,214 

2,225 





5,722 

6,634 
9,452 
12,360 



31,600 

= Opened July, 1903. 



316,415 
15, 627 

8,720 
9,110 
8,172 
22, 134 



35,603 
42, 526 



4,999 
5,812 



5,794 
400 



33,230 
30,970 



17,867 
135,778 



208 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes of patients 



Year 
when 
found- 



RHODE ISLAND— Continued. 

Providence— Continued. 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Peace and Broad streets. 



Woonsocket: . 

Woonsocket Hospital. . 
67 Cass avenue. 



SOUTH CAROLINA. 
Charleston: 

City Hospital 

Lucas and Calhoun streets. 

Hospital and Training School 

135 Cannon street. 



Shirras Dispensary 

72 Society street. 
Columbia: 

Columbia Hospital 

2019 Plain street. 
Taylor Lane Hospital and Training School for Nurs 

Georgetown: 

Taylor Dixon Medical Dispensary 



SOUTH DAKOTA. 
Aberdeen : 

St. Luke's Hospital 



Deadwood: 

St. Joseph's Hospital . . . 
67 Charles street. 



Lead: 

Homestake Hospital . . . 
216 Main street. 
Pierre: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Sioux Falls: 

Sioux Falls Hospital . . . 
Yankton: 

Sacred Heart Hospital . 



TENNESSEE. 
Chattanooga: 

Baroness Erlanger Hospital 

Harrison avenue and Hamilton street. 
O'Rear Smallpox Hospital 



Knoxville: 

ICnoxville General Hospital 

Dameron avenue and Cleveland place. 
Memphis: 

East End Dispensary 

Union and Myrtle avenues. 



Memphis City Hospital , . . . 

Madison and Dunlop streets. 
Presbyterian Home Hospital 

101 Alabama street. 



Shelby County Emergency Hospital. 
United States Marine Hospital 

Armstrong street. 
Nashville: 

Mercy Hospital 

811 South Cherry street. 



Sisters of St. Francis. 
Private corporation . . 



Private corporation. 



City of Charleston 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Trustees of Alexander Shirras endowment. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private association . . 



United States Bureau of Medicine and ! 
gery. 

Private corporation 

St. Barnabas Episcopal Mission 



Presentation Sisters 

United States Government . 
Benedictine Sisters 



Benedictine Sisters 

Homestake Mining Company . 

Benedictine Sisters 

Private corporation 

Benedictine Sisters 



County of Hamilton and city of Chatta- 
nooga. 

County of Hamilton and city of Chat;ta- 
nooga. 

City of Knoxville 



Memphis Hospital Medical College. 

City of Memphis 

Presbyterian Church ., 

Sisters of St. Francis 



Shelby county , , 

United States Public Health and Marine 
Hospital Service. 



Private corporation . 

City of Nashville 

Sisters of Charity. . . 



Woman's Hospital Private corporation . . 

301 North Spruce street. 

Union City: 

ObionCounty Pesthouse Obion county 

1 Not reported. 2 Opened April, 190.'?. 



All classes . 
All classes. 



All classes . 
All classes. 
All classes - 
All classes . 



All, except contagious 

All classes of sick poor 

All classes of poor whites . 



Officers and enlisted men of the United 
States Navy and Marine Corps. 

All, except contagious 

All classes 



All classes 

Indians, and agency employees . 
All, except contagious 



All classes . 
All classes . 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 



All, except contagious, incurable, and in- 
sane. 
Smallpox 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 
All classes 

All, except contagious. 



Smallpox 

American merchant seamen . 



All, except contagious. 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes of 



Smallpox 

3 Opened June : 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



209 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



30952—05 14 



Remainmg 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



(1) 

•I Number of c 



Amount of an- 
Training school I nual subsidy 
for nurses. i from pubUc 
funds. 



Income from 
pay patients, 



S10,229 
8,500 



2,012 

SOO 

10,000 



825,306 1450 



23,842 
3,000 

11,000 
1,000 

2,940 



4,905 
2,000 
6,761 



10,000 
7,647 



700 


1474 


39,334 


1475 


7,000 


1476 


17,340 


1477 


3,545 


1478 


12, 155 


1479 


1,400 


1480 


23,000 


1481 


23,000 


1482 



'Opened July 1, 1903. 



210 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintamed by- 



Classes ol patients treated. 



Year 
when 
foimd- 



1487 
1488 



1490 
1491 



1495 
1496 
1497 
1498 
1499 
1500 
1501 
1502 
1503 
1504 
1505 



1514 
1515 
1516 



1518 
1519 



TEXAS. 
AmaiUlo: 

St. Anthony's Sanitarium 

North Polk and Seventh streets. 
Austin: 

Austin Sanitarium 

Congress avenue and Fourteenth street. 

City and County Hospital 

1401 Sabin street. 

Seton Infirmary 

Nueces and Twenty-sixth streets. 
Beaumont: 

Hotel Dieu 

Sabine Pass avenue and Emmet street. 
Dallas: 

Emergency Hospital 

319 Commerce street. 

Parkland (City) Hospital 

Oaklawn and Maple avenues. 

St. Paul's Sanitarium 

Bryan and Hall streets. 
El Paso: 

Hotel Dieu 

Providence Hospital 

Upson avenue and Santa Fe street. 
Fort Worth: 

Free Dispensary 

800 Russ street. 

St. Joseph's Infirmary 

Galveston: 

John Sealy Hospital 

Eighth and Strand streets. 

St. Mary's Infirmary 

Eighth and Market streets. 
Houston: 

Houston Infirmary Sanitarium 

Washington and Tenth streets. 

St. Joseph's Infirmary 

1910 Crawford street. 
Laredo: 

Mercy Hospital 

Marshall: 

Texas and Pacific Railway Hospital 

New Braunfels: 

New Braunfels City Hospital 

Palestine: 

International and Great Northern Railroad Hospital 
Paris: 

W. B. AJkin Hospital 

Port Arthur: 

Lake View Hospital 

San Antonio: 

San Antonio City Hospital 

North Leona and Morales streets. 

Santa Rosa Infirmary 

745 West Houston street. 

United States Army Hospital 

(Fort Sam Houston.) 
Sherman: 

St. Vincent's Sanitarium 

Temple: 

(julf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway Hospital 

King's Daughters' Hospital 

Terrell: 

Texas Midland Railroad Hospital 

604 South Rockwall avenue. 
Texarkana: 

St. Louis Southwestern Railway Hospital 

Victoria: 

Valley View Hospital 

Waco: 

Waco City Hospital 

Third and Marlboro streets. 

UTAH. 
Provo City: 

Provo General Hospital 

192 Southeast street. 
Robinson: 

Tintic Hospital 

Salt Lak^ City: 

Holy Cross Hospital '. 

1 Not reported. 

2 Number of cases treated. 



Sisters of Charity . 



Private corporation 

City of Aiistin and county of Travis. 
Sisters of Charity 



All classes . 
All classes. 
All classes. 
All classes . 



Sisters of Charity. 



Dallas Medical College 

City of Dallas 

Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul 



Sisters of Charity . . . 
Private coi-p oration. 



AH, except smallpox and yellow fever. 
All classes 

All classes of indigent sick 

All, except contagious and insane 



Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word. 

City of Galveston 

Sisters of the Sacred Heart 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 

All classes of sick poor. 

All classes 

All classes 

All classes 



Private corporation I Railroad employees and all other classes, 

except contagious. 



Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word . 
Sisters of Mercy 



All classes . 
All classes. 



Texas and Pacific Railway Company I Sick and injui'ed railway employees. 

City of New Braunfels and county of Comal. AH classes. 



Private association 

City of Paris and county of Lamar. 

Pi'ivate coi-poration 

City of San Antonio 

Sisters of Charity 

United States Government . , . '. 



Sisters of Charity . 



Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway Com- 
pany. 



Texas Midland Railroad Company. 



St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters oi the Holy Cross. 



Sick and injured railway employees. . 

All classes. 

Emergency 

All, except insane 

All, except contagious 

Sick and injured soldiers 

All, except contagious 

Sick and injured railway employees . . . 
All, except incurable and contagious. . 
Sick and injured railroad employees. . 

Sick and injured railway employees. . 

All, except contagious 

All classes of sick poor 



1902 
(1) 



All. except contagious 1903 

AD classes I 1900 

AU, except contagious ' 1875 



3 Assessments on employees. 
< Opened December 29, 1903. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



211 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 






Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from 

pay patients, 

1903. 


Total cost of 

maintenance, 

1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 


Number of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. - 














0) 

1 








S4,712 


S3, 298 
5,414 






















29 


166 




28 




2 


No 




W 


1487 


(1) 

90 


317 
760 









16 
20 


13 
15 


Yes 





4,674 
12,000 


11,864 


1488 


No 


1489 


6 


51 




n 


2 


4 


2 


No 




1,500 


4,000 


1490 


67 


720 




52 


2 


3 


4 


No 







12,000 


1491 


55 


1,311 




64 


2 


30 


24 


Yes 





26,421 

25,014 
5,335 


26,000 

14,500 
4,089 


1492 


11 


915 
213 




86 


1 



25 
18 


25 

7 


Yes 






1493 


Yes 


1494 


2 4B 


2 1,000 




2 59 


1 


33 




No 







238 


1495 


53 


84S 




43 


1 


12 


25 


No 





14,000 
8,840 
(•) 

45,000 
9,000 


12,000 
32,278 
25,000 
36,000 
18 000 


1196 


102 


1,265 


(') 


90 


6 


7 


28 


Yes 






























60 


1,613 




49 


1 


20 


15 


No 


8 ''04 


1500 


(1) 


(1) 


(1) 







(I) 




7 


No 


600 





(1) 

3 25,604 
1,000 


1501 


24 


2,440 


^6 


3 




No 





1502 


5 
50 


26 
1,204 




19 


2 
3 






1 






fiOO 





No 




1504 


15 


(1) 


(1) 







(') 




No 




'' 160 


6,365 


1505 


5 


















40 






42 





2 




Yes 




685 




l.W 


50 


1, 149 




4'^ 




(1) 


25 


Yes 





41,216 


40,957 
(1) 


1508 


30 


, 900 




25 


5 





30 


Yes 







1509 


3 


313 




1,3 









Yes 





C) 


(*) 


1510 


45 


756 
















(1) 






11 


173 




4 





8 


6 


Yes 


180 


1.512 


2 


143 




2 


2 






No 








3 1,920 


1513 


59 

• 
10 


1,403 
95 




59 

5 


1 




5 

4 


No 







2,700 


» 28, 146 
2,000 


1514 




1515 


5 


W 


W 






3 















10 


100 









4 


Yes 


C^) 


1517 


1 
71 


50 
1,3.32 




4 
73 








20 


No 






7 7,000 
31,944 


3,000 
21,426 


1518 


Yes 


1,519 



' Assessments on employees and donations by company. 



Opened October, 1903. 



Including monthly contributions from 



212 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



UTAH— Continued. 



Salt Lake City— Continued. 

Post Hospital 

(Fort Douglass.) 
St. Mark's Hospital 



Winter Quarters: 

Winter Quarters Hospital . 



VERMONT. 
Brattleboro; 

Brattleboro Memorial Hospital . 
BurUngton: 

Mary Fletcher Hospital 

Colchester avenue. 



Montpelier: 

Heaton Hospital 

(Semmary Hill.) 
Proctor: 

Proctor Hospital 

Rutland: 

Rutland Hospital 

46 Nichol street. 



St. Albans: 

St. Aloans Hospital . 
St. Johnsbury: 



St. Johnsbury Hospital. . . 
17 Prospect street. 
Winooski: 

Fanny Allen Hospital 



VIRGINIA. 
Alexandria; 

Alexandria Hospital 

Wolf and Pitt streets. 
Clifton Forge: 

Chesapeake and Ohio Hospital. 

Fredericksburg: 

Mary Washington Hospital 

Water street. 



Hampton: 

Dixie Hospital. 



Lynchburg: 

Marshall Lodge Home and Retreat. 
1503 Grace street. 
Newport News: 

Newport News General Hospital 

Norfolk: 

Norfolk City Dispensary 

City HaU square. 
Norfolk Protestant Hospital 



Petersburg: 

Home for the Sick 

Madison street. 
Portsmouth: 

King's Daughters' Hospital 

Emmet street and Park View. 



United States Naval Hospital. 



Richmond: 

City Free Dispensary. 



College and Marshall streets. 



Memorial Hospital. 



Twelfth and Broad streets. 



Richmond Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Dispensary and 
Infirmary. 

217 Governor street. 



Supervised and maintai 



United States Government 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Salt Lake City 

Pleasant Valley Coa 1 Company 

Private eoi-poration 

Private corporation 

Private corporation .,. 

Vermont Marble Company 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity of Providence 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Private corporation 

Chesapeake and Ohio Hospital Association 
Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Masonic Fraternity of Lynchburg 

Private corporation 

City of Norfolk 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 

Trinity Circle, King's Daughters and Sons 

United States Bureau of Medicine and Sur- 
gery. 

Medical College of Virginia 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation , 

Private corporation 

University College of Medicine 

Roanoke Hospital Association 

assessments on employees. 



Classes of patients treated. 



Sick and injured soldiers 

Smallpox 

Injured and sick coal miners 

All, except Incurable and contagious 

All, except contagious and maternity 

AU, except chronic, tubercular, and con- 
tagious. 

All classes 

AU, except contagious 

All classes . - 

All, except contagious 

AU, except insane and contagious 

All, except contagious and maternity 

AU classes 

Chesapeake and Ohio Railway employees 
and aU other classes. 

All classes 

All, except chronic 

AU, except contagious 

All, e.xcept contagious 

AU classes of sick poor 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

AU, except contagious 

Officers and enlisted men of United States 
Navy and Marine Corps. 

All, except incurable and insane 

Ear, eye, nose, and throat 

All except Incurable (white) , 

AU. except infectious 

All, except contagious and Infectious 

» Opened November 23, 1904. 



Year 
when 
found- 



1904 
187fi 



1895 
1894 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



213 



DlSPENSARIEwS— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



On January 1, Admitted dur- ! n^^™f^|, 
1904. mgl904. ^'"""^^^^^'^ ■^^' 



' Ntunber of cases treated. 



(1) 
■ Opened July, 1903. 



ioualTubsidy" Income from : Total cost of 
from public ^^^ ^?-}}?^^^' mamtenance, 



Yes 





3,000 



2,000 





118 

176 

500 




1,500 




Yes 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes 








No 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes 


Yes 


No 


Yes.. . . 



1,300 

500 

340 


Yes 


Yes 




Yes 


No 








1,500 


3.885 ! 


Yes 






Yes 


Yes 


Yes 



0) 
8.50,000 



2,465 

7,758 
3,971 
2,656 
4,277 



2,255 
2,022 



13,500 
29,085 



4,534 
24,342 



4,482 
'■ Closed five months during 1904. 



n 



$48,000 
3,000 



1,903 


1527 


6,862 


1528 


7,694 


■1529 


4,752 


1530 


3,034 


1531 



(1) i 1534 
2,000 1535 

8,662 I 1536 
6,520 j, 1537 

12,000 1.538 

2,620 i 1539 

21,000 , 1540 
42,018 1 1541 



(1) 



2,239 1.543 
1544 



961 ; 1545 

{') j 1.546 

14,686 ' 1547 

4,994 ! 1548 



4,1.50 
32,000 



549 



214 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by — 



: of patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



1561 

1562 

1563 

1564 

1565 

1566 

1567 
1568 

1569 
1570 
1571 

1572 
1573 
1574 
1575 
1576 
1577 
1578 

1579 
1.580 
1581 



VIRGINIA— Continued. 
Staunton: 

King's Daughters' Hospital 

212 East Frederick street. 
Winchester: 

Winchester Memorial Hospital 



King's Daughters. . . 
Private corporation , 



All, except infectious and chronic (white) . 
All, except incurable and insane 



WASHINGTON. 
Aberdeen: 

Aberdeen General Hospital 



Private corporation . . . 
Sisters of St. Dominic. 



AU classes. 
AU classes . 



Bellingham: 

St. Joseph's Hospital. 



All classes 

All, except contagious. 



.1 1894 I 



Bremerton: 

United States Naval Hospital 

Colfax: 

St. Ignatius Hospital 

Everett: 

Everett Hospital 

3511-3515 Hoyt avenue. 
Georgetown: 

King County Hospital King county . 



Sisters of Charity... 
Private corporation . 



Officers and enlisted men of United States 
Navy and Marine Corps. 



All, except contagious. 
All classes 



Hoquiam: 

Hoquiam General Hospital Private corporation , 

North Yakima: 

North Yakima Deaconess Hospital I Deaconess Board, Methodist Episcopal 

8 South Eighth street. I Church. 
. St Elizabeth's Hospital ' Sisters of Charity 



Port Angeles: 

Port Angeles General Hospital I Private corporation , 

Port Townsend: 

St. John's Hospital Sisters of Charity , 

United States Marine Hospital ! United States Public Health and Marine 

I Hospital Service. 
Seattle: 

Pro-\ddenoe Hospital ! Sisters of Charity , 

Fifth avenue. 1 



All classes of sick poor 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All, except maternity and contagious. 

All classes 

All classes 



1902 
1890 



All classes 

American merchant seamen. 



Foot of Jackson street. 

Sedro Woollev: 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

South Bend: 

South Bend General Hospital 

Spokane; 

Marie Beard Deaconess Hospital 

715 Fourth avenue. 

St. Luke's Hospital 

A street and Summit avenue. 
Tacoma: 

Fannie C. Paddock Memorial Hospitu 
312 J street. 



Pacific avenue. 



Vancouver: 

St. Joseph's Hospital. . 
WaUawalla: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

208 Fifth street. 



WEST VIRGINIA. 
Charleston: 

Charleston General Hospital 

Clarksburg: 

Harrison County Hospital . 



464r^68 Mechanic street. 

Kessler Hospital 

Water and Mechanic streets. 
Elkins: 

Davis Memorial Hospital 

Fairmont: 

Fairmont City Hospital 

Miners' Hospital No. 3 

iNot reported. 



Private corporation. 



All, except contagious. 
All, except contagious. 
All classes 



Skagit Cormty Hospital Association. 

Private association 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Pierce county 

Sisters of St. Francis 



Sisters of Charity... 
Sisters of Charity . . . 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

State of West Vnginia. 
2 Opened April, 1903. 



All classes 

All classes 

All classes 

All, except chronic and contagious. 

AUc 

AUc 

All c 



; of indigent sick . 



AU classes 

All classes 

All, except contagious. 



All, except infectious. 

All classes 

All classes 



All classes. 



All classes 

Injured miners and all other classes. 
3 Opened Noveml:ier,. 1903. 



1894 
1900 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



215 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 



Remaining 

December 3: 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from 
pay patients, 



1,130 
1,236 
1,000 

135 
600 
314 
433 



7,034 
16,325 



8,026 
19,077 



16,921 
42,000 
2,000 



8,982 
8,991 
30,218 



4,916 
12,537 



S4,623 


1552 


) 


1553 


7,200 


1554 


5,000 


1555 


10,766 


1556 


6,500 


1557 



7,026 


1559 


12,000 


1560 


18,549 


1561 


) 


1562 


2,286 


1563 


7,215 


1564 


19,433 


1565 


2,800 


1566 


8,371 


1567 


18,585 


1568 


14,832 


1569 


44,000 


1570 


10,000 


1571 


3,500 


1572 


) 


1573 


11,026 


1574 


9,057 


1575 


26,928 


1576 


4,000 


1577 


23,975 


1578 


4,761 


1579 


12,050 


1580 


9,600 


1581 



5,000 


1582 


(1) 


1583 


« 


1584 


(•') 


1585 


(») 


1586 



' Opened December, 1903. 



■ Opened May 27, 1903. 



216 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maiBtained Ijy- 



Classes of patients 



WEST VIRGINIA— Continued. 
Glendale: 

Reynolds Memorial Hospital 

Hinton: 

Hinton Hospital 

Huntington; 

Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Hospital 

Eighteenth street and Sixth avenue. 

Huntington Hospital 

714 Fourth avenue. 
MoKendree: 

Miners' Hospital No. 2 : 

Martinsburg: 

King's Daughters' Hospital 

Morgantown: 

Morgantown City Hospital 

346 WiUey street. 
North Fork: 

McDowell County Smallpox Hospital 

Paint Creek: 

Sheltering Arms Hospital 

Parkers burg: 

City Hospital 

514-516 Thirteenth street. 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Fifth and Avery streets. 
Welch: 

Miners' Hospital No. 1 

Wheeling: 

City Hospital 

Wheeling Hospital 

109 Main street. 



WISCONSIN. 



St. Elizabeth's Hospital 

877 Lake street. 
Ashland: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

304 East Front street. 
Beloit: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Park avenue and Bevard street. 

Strong Emergency Hospital 

Chippewa Falls: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Eau Claire: 

Sacred Heart Hospital 

•546 Putnam avenue. 
Fond du Lac: 

St. Agnes Hospital 

170 East Division street. 

St. Mary's Springs Sanitarium 

Rural Free Delivery No. 4. 
Green Bay: 

Green Bay Isolation Hospital 

St. Vincent's Hospital 

840 South Webster street. 
Janes ville: 

Detention Hospital 

Palmer Memorial Hospital 

220 Washington street. 
Kenosha: 

Kenosha Hospital 

395 Exchange street. 
Keshena: 

Menominee Indian Hospital 

La Crosse: 

La Crosse Lutheran Hospital 



La Crosse Public Hospital 

Thirteenth and Badger streets. 

St. Francis Hospital 

Tenth and Market streets. 
Madison: 

Madison General Hospital 

.321 North Hamilton street. 
Manitowoc: 

Holy Family Hospital 

Twenty-second street and Western avenue. 
Marshfield: 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Milwaukee: 

Johnston Emergency Hospital 

316-320 Sycamore street. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Association of employees 

Private corporation 

State of West Virginia 

King's Daughters 

Private corporation 

McDowell county 

Episcopal Diocese of West Virginia 

City of Parkersburg 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

State of West Virginia 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph ; 

Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of the Poor Handmaids of Jesus 
Christ. 

Sisters of St. Mary 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Sisters of St. Agnes 

Sisters of St. Agnes 

City of Green Bay 

Sisters of St. Francis 

City of Janesville 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

United States Government 

German and Norwegian Lutheran churches. 
Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters of the Perpetual Adora- 
tion. 

Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity 

Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother , 

City of Milwaukee , 

- Opened Decemler 19, 1903. 



All classes 

All, except smallpox , 

All, except contagious 

Miners injured while at work 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

Smallpox 

Miners and all other classes . . 

AU classes 

All classes 

Miners and all other classes . . 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

AU classes 

All, except contagious and ins 
All classes 

All, except contagious 

Nervous and convalescent. . . 

Contagious 

All classes 

Contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

Menominee Indians 

AU classes 

AU, except contagious 

All, except contagious 

All classes 

AU, except contagious 

AU, except contagious 

Emergency , . . 

3 Opened July, 1903. 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



217 



DISPENSARIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 



On January 1, Admitted dur- 
1904. ing 1904. 



Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 



NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 



10 
2 

I Open only between June and October. 



20 I Yes. 
Yes. 



Yes. 
Yes. 
No,. 
No.. 



Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 



Income from Total cost of 
pay patients, maintenance, 



S7,300 
5,923 



22,723 
15,343 



12,500 

700 

3,192 

6,878 



1590 
1591 

1592 
1593 
1594 

1595 
1596 



28,723 . 1600 
15,274 ' 1601 



{'} I 1604 

4,298 ! 1605 

17,173 : 1606 

13,861 1607 



200 i 1610 
,974 : 1611 



310 -1612 
5,208 , 1613 



3,000 


1615 


11,408 


1616 


12,488 


1617 


28,000 


1618 


6,190 


1619 


5,560 


1620 


) 


1621 


12,000 


1622 



■ Opened October 18, 1903. 



218 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 2.— HOSPITALS AND 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Classes ot patients treated. 



Year 
when 
found- 



162.3 
1624 
1625 
1626 
1627 
1628 
1629 



1632 
1633 



1637 
1638 



1641 
1642 
1643 
1644 

1645 
1646 
1647 
1648 
1649 



WISCONSIN— Continued. 

Milwaukee— Continued. 

Lakeside General Hospital 

410 Prospect avenue. 

Milwaukee Children's Free Hospital 

219 Tenth street. 

MUwaukee Health Department Hospital 

102 Seventh street. 

Milwaukee Hospital 

Twentj'-second, State, and Cedar streets. 

Mt. Sinai Hospital 

562 Fourth street. 

Post-Graduate Hospital 

603 Milwaukee street. 

St. Joseph's Hospital 

Fourth street and Reservoir avenue. 

St. Mary's Hospital 

North Point. 
Trinity Hospital and Milwaukee Medical College D 
pensary. 

200 Ninth street. 
Minocqua: 

St. Augustine's Hospital 

Oshkosh: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

203 Merrit street. 
Racine: 

St. Luke's Hospital 

College avenue and Thirteenth street. 
Rhinelander: 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Sheboygan: 

St. Nicholas Hospital 

Ninth and Superior streets. 
Superior: 

Leslie Hospital 

719 John avenue. 

Red Cross Hospital 

Twentieth street and Iowa avenue. 

St. Francis Hospital 

Stuison avenue and Third street. 

St. Mary's Hospital 

Clough avenue and Eleventh street. 
Tomahawk: 

Sacred Heart Hospital 

Wausau: 

Emergency Hospital 

414 Scott street. 

Riverside Hospital 

Wauwatosa; 

Milwaukee County Hospital 

WYOMING. 
Cambria: 

Cambria Fuel Company's Hospital 

Casper: 

City Hospital of Casper 

Cheyenne: 

St. John's Hospital 

300 Twenty-third street. 
Laramie : 

Albany County Hospital 

Rock Springs: 

Wyoming General Hospital 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Milwaukee Children's Hospital Association. 
City of Milwaukee 



Institution of Protestant Deaconesses of 

Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. 
Jewish Hospital Association 



Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of Charity 

Milwaukee Medical College. 



Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother. 
Danish Hospital Association 



Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother. 
Sisters of St. Francis 



Private association. 
Private association. 



Sisters of the Sorrowful Mother. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Milwaukee eountv 



Cambria Fuel Company. 

Mrs. M. J. Andre 

Laramie county 



Albany county 

State of Wyoming. 



All classes 

Children with noncontagious diseases . 

Contagious 

All classes 

All classes 

Gynecological and surgical 

All classes 

All, except infectious and chronic 

All classes 



All, except smallpox. 
All classes 



All classes . 
All classes. 



All classes 

Women and children, . 
All, except contagious - 
All, except contagious. 

All classes 



All classes ; 

All classes of destitute sick . 

Sick and injured employees . 

AH classes 

AU classes 



All classes . 
All classes . 



HOSPITALS AND DISPENSARIES. 



219 



DISPENSAKIES— Continued. 



NUMBER OF PATIENTS. 


NUMBER ON MEDICAL STAFF. 


N\Hnber of 
nurses. 


Training school 
for nurses. 


Amount of an- 
nual subsidy 
from public 
funds. 


Income from Total cost of 

pay patients, maintenance, 

, 1903. i 1903. 




On January 1, 
1904. 


Admitted dur- 
ing 1904. 


Remaining 

December 31, 

1904. 


Resident. 


Visiting. 




20 

20 
22 
46 

10 
64 
51 
52 

50 
20 

25 
45 
13 
6 
30 

22 

5 

14 

250 

4 



-a 

7 
46 


298 
225 
126 
948 
160 
(') 

1,018 
1,030 
1,200 

65 
792 
208 

367 
475 
35 
460 
935 

248 

15 

155 

1,523 

45 
19 

371 
92 

464 


13 

38 
12 
41 
11 

59 
53 


60 
18 

10 
30 
33 
6 
32 
65 

1 

10 
214 

1 
1 
23 

33 





■ 2 

3 
2 

1 






1 
1 



1 



5 

2 


1 


10 
15 
1 
12 

w 

4 
1 
12 
30 

4 

10 

3 

18 

3 
(1) 

3 
25 


2 

7 


18 
5 
4 
20 
4 
12 
35 
25 
30 

8 
16 
7 

8 
7 
2 

20 

2 
5 
25 

6 
2 


Yes 


SO 



$12,630 





17,523 

(^) 

6,500 
25,300 
(1) 

24,000 

1,000 

4,200 

4,844 
8,500 
8,500 
400 
13,522 
18,764 

8,000 

2,250 
337 



292 

5,054 

(») 
16,073 


512,423 

■ . 4,792 

10,000 

8,500 
24,025 
(') 
23,000 

2,000 

6,000 

5,090 
8,000 
7,200 
1,000 
12,665 
17,329 

6,400 
1,000 
3,000 
49,840 

5,319 
1,000 
7,700 

13,030 


1623 


No 


1624 


No 


1625 


Yes 













294 










348 








Yes 


1628 


Yes 


1629 


Yes 












Yes 


1633 


Yes 


1634 


No 




No 


,™ 


Yes. 


1637 


No 


1638 


No..: 








No 








No 


1643 


Yes 


1644 


No 



340 


1645 


No 




Yes 










Yes 




1649 









3 Opened September 1, 1903. 



220 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amount ( 

entrance t 

required 



Year 
when 
found- 



ALABAMA. 
Mobile: 

Benevolent Home, The 

Government and Ann streets. 



Colored Old Folks and Orphan Home 

Spi-ingfleld avenue and Mobile street. 



ARKANSAS. 
BatesvUle: 

Widows and Orphans' Home 



Ophelia Polk Moore Memorial Home . 



!x-Confederate Home of Arkansas. 



CALIFORNIA. 
Deooto: 

Masonic Widows and Orphans' Home 
Dtmond: 

German Old People's Home 

Evergreen: 

Woman's Relief Corps Home 



Los Angeles: 

HoUenbeck Home, The 

573 South Boyle avenue. 
Mercy Home 

326 Boyd street. 
MlUs College: 

Home for Aged and Infu-m Colored People . 

Oakland: 

Alameda County King's Daughters' Home. 
3900 Broadway. 



Mary R. Smith's Cottages 

Fourth and Cottage avenues. 
Pacific Grove: 

John Tennant Memorial Home, The 

Forest avenue. 
Sacramento: 

Marguerite Home 

1617 Seventh street. 

Mater Misericordiae Home 

Twenty-second street between Q and R. 
San Diego: 

St. Joseph's Home lor the Aged 

Sixth street and University avenue. 
San Francisco: 

Hebrew Home for Aged Disabled 

507 Lombard street. 



Mobile Female Benevolent Society. . . 

Colored Old Folks and Orphan Home 

Society. 
Little Sisters ol the Poor 



State ol Alabama =■ 



Aged and Infirm women . 

Homeless c 
children. 
Aged poor 

Confederate veterans . 



Independent Order ol Odd Fellows . 



Private association . 
State of Arkansas. . . 
Private coi'poration. 



Widows and orphans of Odd Fellows. 
Needy women and children 



Aged and urfirm women 

Indigent ex-Confederate soldiers. 
Aged women 



None. 
None. 
None. 

None. 

None. 
None. 

None. 
None. 
$100... 



Masonic Fraternity of California. 

Private corporation 

California Woman's ReUef Corps. 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 



Orphans, widows, and aged Masons. 
Aged and infirm 



Aged men and women 

Working girls, and aged of both s 

Aged and infirm 

Incurables 

Aged women and children 



None 

Not fixed. 
None 



King's Daughters 

Ladies' ReUef Society of Oakland . 

! 

Private coi-p oration Orphans and other homeless girlsj^ . 

Private corporation Aged people 



Private corporation Aged indigent women . 

Sisters of Mercy Aged and infirm 



Sisters ol Mercy Aged and infirm . 



Private corp oration Aged disabled . 



Little Sisters of the Poor Aged and Infirm 

King's Daughters Incurables 

Private corporation Aged people not incurable . 

Sisters ol Mercy Aged and infirm 

Episcopal Chui-ch i Aged and infirm women . . . 



Sisters of St. Francis of the Sacred i Incurables. 

Heart. | 

Sisters of Mercy \ Aged men . . 



$250. 



$1,000. 
.$500... 
None. 

None. 



$2,000 to $2,500 . 
$1,000 to $2,000 . 

$] ,000 to $3,000. 



None 

None 

None 

$100 

$1,560 

$1,000 to $1,.500. 

$1,000 

Not fixed 

.51,500 to S2,000. 



Private corporation Women 65 years and over | .S1,000. 



: Sisters of St. Dominic ' Aged and Infirm 

I Opened October, 1904. 2 Not reported. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 



221 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women. Cliildren. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. Cluldren. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. Cliildren. 






Income 

from pay 

inmates', 

1903. 



Total cost 
ol mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



titution since . 



24,000 
13,244 



750 


10,500 


15,406 


12,965 


500 


1,300 


19,477 


10,710 


2,501 


13,879 





8,100 



7,847 
2,000 



10,971 
10, 104 
10,000 
25,000 
10,350 
6,000 

2,750 
3,321 



222 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained ' 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

requii'ed. 



CALIFORNIA— Continued. 
Thermalito: 

Odd Fellows' Home 



Independent Order of Odd Fellows . 
State of CaUIomia 



None. 
None. 



COLORADO. 
Colorado Springs: 

Union Printers' Home 

Huerfano street. 
Denver: 

Old Ladies' Home 

Thirty-eighth avenue. 
Monte Vista: 

Colorado Soldiers and Sailors' Home . 



International Typographical Union. 
Ladies' Relief Society 



Old and infirm union printers . 
Aged and destitute 



None.. 
S300 to 5 



State of Colorado . 



CONNECTICUT. 
Bridgeport; 

Sterling Widows' Home 

354 Prospect street. 
Groton: 

Odd Fellows' Home of Connecticut . 



Old and infirm soldiers and sailors. . . None 



Widows . 



Hartford: 

Church Home 

123 Retreat avenue. 



Odd Fellows' Home Association. 
Episcopal churches of Hartford . 
Hartford Hospital 



St. John's, Christ, and Trinity Epis 

copal churches. 
St. John's, Chi'ist, and Trinity Epis 

copal churches. 

arming 

Churcl- 
Park Congregational Church . 



Private corporation. 



210 Windsor avenue. 

Widows' Home 

216 Windsor avenue. 
Meriden: 

Curtis Home 

Crown street. 
Middle town: 

St. Luke's Home for Aged and Destitute Women .' Church of the Holy Trinity (Episco- 
pal 
New Britain: 
Erwin Home 



Aged and indigent Odd Fellows 

.A.ged homeless women 

Aged men and women 

Aged women 

Aged women 

Widows 

Destitute - 



Aged 



and childr 



None. . 
S500... 
SI, 000. 
None. . 
None.. 
None . . 
None . . 
None . 



New Haven: 

Home for Aged and Destitute Women . 
125 Wall street. 



238 Winthrop avenue. 

St. Paul's Church Home 

fiOO Chapel street. 

Trinity Church Home 

303 George street. 
New London: j 

Smith Memorial Home I Private corporation 

Noroton Heights: 



South Congregational Church . 



.\ged and infirm women ' Not fixed . 

None 



First Church of Christ (Congrega- 
tional). 
Little Sisters of the Poor 



St. Paul's Church (Episcopal) . 
Trinity Episcopal Church 



Indigent women 

Aged and destitute women . 

Aged and inflim 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm women 



Aged women . 



Fitch's Home for Soldi 



Norwich: 

Eliza Huntington Memorial He 

99 Washington street. 
Sheltering Arms 

Harland road. 



State of Connecticut . 
Private corporation. 
United Workers 



Waterbury: 

Southmayd Home 

88.5 North Main street. 



DELAWARE. 
AVUmington : 

Home for Aged Women 

Harrison street and Gilpin avenue. 



St. John's Episcopal Church . 



First Congregational Church. 
Sisters of Mercy 



Private association 

Liittle Sisters of the Poor 

:d:ome of Merciful Rest Societ^ 
/ 

'Not reported. 



Aged women 

Homeless men and wc 



None. 
None. 
None . 
None. 

SIOO... 



S500... 
None. 



Aged and homeless women. 
Aged and infirm 



Aged and infirm women . 

Aged and infu-m 

Incurables 



None 

None 

Not fixed . 

SI, 000 



?200toS250. 
None 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



223 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Women. ChDdren. 



Niimber 
of paid 
imployees. 



. Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds 



Income 

from pay 

inmates", 

1903. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



$22,000 
116,433 



37,598 
7,129 



4,432 
3,017 



2,615 
1,438 
3,200 
23,984 



2,411 
11,173 



2,421 



224 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table .3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



DELAWARE— Continued, 

Wilmington— Continued. 

Layton Home 

Thii'ty-fifth and Market streets. 

Minquadale Home 

Sarah Ann White Home 

822 French street. 



DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 

Washington: 

Aged Woman's Home 

1225 Thirty-second street NW. 



Layton Home Society . 

Private association 

Private association 



Aged colored men and women . 



Aged men and couples 

Aged and infirm colored people . 



Christian and Elenora Ruppert Home . 
Good Hope Hill (Anacostia) . 



Union Benevolent Society.. 
Baptist Benevolent Society. 

Private coi-poration 

Church of the Epiphany 



Home for Destitute Colored Women and Cliildren. 
Eighth and Irving streets NW. 



Little Sisters of the Poor. 



Aged and indigent women 

Aged . infirm . and destitute women . . 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm women 

Destitute colored women and chUdre 

Aged and infirm poor 



Louise Home 

Fifteenth str« 
nueNW. 



and Massachusetts 



Protestant Episcopal Church i Poor widows of the Protestant Epis- 
copal Church. 
Private corporation Destitute educated gentlewomen 



National Lutheran Home 

(Langdon.) 
United States Soldiers' Home . 



Methodist Episcopal Church . . 

Evangelical Lutheran Church. 

United States Government. . . 
Private corporation 



FLORIDA. 
.Tacksonville: 

Confederate Veterans' Home . 



Daniel Memorial Orphanage and Home for the 
Friendless. 

Evergreen avenue and Third street. 
Home for the Aged 



Tampa: 

Colored Home and School 

Nebraska avenue. 
Old Ladies' Home 

404 Washington street. 



GEORGIA. 
Amerious: 

Masonic Industrial School and Widows' and Or- 
phans' Home. 
Atlanta: 

Confederate Soldiers' Home 



Home for the Aged Association. 
Protestant Episcopal Church. . . 

Private association 

Private association 



Colored Masons . 



Augusta: 

Mary Warren Home 

158.5 Broad street. 



State of Georgia 

King's Daughters and Sons, 
Tabernacle Baptist Church. 



Tubman Home, The 

Widows' Home 

124 Greene street. 



Private corporation. 
Private association. . 



Macon: 

Julia Parkman Jones Benevolent Home 

512 Walnut street. 
Savannah: 

Abraham's Home 

East Broad and Broughton streets. 



Private corporation . . 
Christ Church 'V'estrv . 



Savannah Widows' Society. 
Little Sisters of the Poor . . . 



Aged members of the Methodist Epis 

copal Church. 
Aged and infirm 



Ex-soldiers of the Regular Army 

Incurable men , women , and children 



Indigent and infirm Confederate vet- 
erans. 
Orphans and friendless persons 



Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm women . 



Aged and indigent women . 



Aged and dependent 

Aged and infirm members of the Tab- 
ernacle Baptist Church. 

Aged and infirm 

Self-sustaining widows 



Aged, infirm, and indigent negroes, 
and orphan and neglected children. 



Indigent and aged gentlewomen. 



Aged and infirm . 
Aged and infirm . 



■SlOO 

S150 to $400 
S125 

None 

S250 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

S200 to S250 

$150 to $200 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

$300 

None 

None.. 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 



2 State subsidy of $100 per year for each beneficiary. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



225 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Men. Women. ChOdren 



Admitted during 1904. 



30952—05 15 



Women. Children. 



" Opened October. 1903. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Number 

of paid 

employees. 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 



Income 
from pay 
Inmates, 



' Opened December, 1903. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 






1,062 


250 


2,534 





4,234 





3,025 





11,992 


80 


Q) 


640 


1,444 





20,543 


1,550 


5,302 





2,500 





270, 126 


2,168 


10, 795 



1,.373 
1,536 



(■■') 
11,000 

(*) 

0) 

3,000 



226 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION 



IDAHO. 

Boise: 

Idaho Soldiers' Home 



ILLINOIS: 
Alton: 

Alton Woman's Home 



Arlington Heights: 

Evangelical Lutheran Old Folks' Home 

BensenviUe: 

German Evangelical Old People's Home and Or- 
phanage. 
Champaign: 

Garwood Home 



Cliicago: 

Church Home for Aged Persons 

4323^327 EDis avenue. 
German Baptist Old People's Home. 
1006 North Spauiding avenue. 



Home for the Aged 

and Throop streets. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



State ol Idaho . 



Alton Woman's Home Association. 

Evangelical Lutheran churches 

German EvangeUeal Synod 



Private corporation 

Episcopal Diocese of Chicago . 



Western German Baptist Old Peo- 
ple's Home Society. 
Private association 



L'nited Hebrew Charities 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Methodist Episcopal Church. 



Norwegian Old People's Home 

Society. 
Old People's Home Society 



Orthodox Jewish Home for the Aged- 
Albany and Ogden avenues. 
St. Anthony's Home 

28-40 Frankfort street. 



Private corporation 

Polish Cathohc Church. 



Swedish Home of Mercy 

250-260 Foster avenue. 
Danville: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. . . 
Decatur: 

Anna B. Milliken Home and Macon County Indus- 
trial School for Girls. 
Oakland avenue. 
Highland Park: 

Home for Aged and Disabled Railroad Employees 
of America. 

Jacksonville: 

Old People's Home 

Macon: 

Eastern Star and Masonic Home 



Odd Fellows' Home 

Mt. Morris: 

Old People and Orphans' Home . 
Oak Park: 

German Old People's Home 



-■eona: 

Bradley Home 

2213 Main street. 



St. Joseph's Home , 

405 Smith street. 
Quincy: 

Anna Bro^vn Home for the Aged. . . 

1507 North Fifth street. 
Illinois Soldiers and Sailors' Home. 



Sisters of the Third Order of St. 

Francis. 
Swedish Evangelical Mission Cove- 



United States Government. 
Private corporation 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



Aged and destitute. 



189.5 



1896 



Aged and infirm, and orphans i S200 

I 

Aged women $300 to $500 . 

Aged men and women S500 

Aged disabled [ .S200 to S350 . 

Aged and infirm colored persons ' SlOO ; 1898 

-Iged and infirm , .S300 ' 1891 

Aged and infirm j None 1876 

■ 
Aged and infirm None 1891 

Aged and infirm None '. | 1882 

I 
Aged and infirm S300 ' 1898 

Aged and infirm S300 1896 

Aged women 8300 1873 

Aged Jews None 1899 

Aged men and women, and friendless : None 1899 

orphans. 
Aged, blind, and crippled Not fixed 1898 



Brotherhoods of Locomotive Engi- 
neers, Firemen and Trainmen, and 
Order of Railway Conductors. 



Christian Church 

Order of the Eastern Star of Illinois. 



Disabled soldiers None 18 

Aged women, and girls , S300 to S.500 18 



Aged, infirm, and disabled railway S24. 
employees. 



Aged and infirm . 



1900 
1896 



Independent Qrderof Odd Fellows- 
German Baptist Brethren Church . 



Women's Society of the German Old 
People's Home. 



Private corporation. . 
Sisters of St. Francis. 



Private corporation. 



State of Illinois . . . 
Episcopal Church . 



Old People's Home 

St. Vincent's Home 

1340 North Tenth street. 



German Methodist Episcopal Church 
Sisters of the Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

' Not reported. 



Aged and indigent Odd Fellows ; None . 

Aged and infirm None . 

Aged and infirm S300. . . 

Aged women §400. - . 

Aged and infirm $300- - - 



Aged, infirm, incurable, blind, and Not fixed - 
crippled. 



Aged persons < 



I years S300- 



Aged and infirm soldiers and sailors . . . None - 

Episcopal Church poor None . 

Aged and infirm .§'200..- 

Aged and infirm None - 



1890 
1885 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



227 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women, i Children. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. Children. 



December 31, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Number 

of paid 

employees 



oi 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds 



.5 





3 





2 





16 


, 




















6 


1 


5 





15 





7 


1 








3 


■0 


1.5 





:^^9. 




4 





5 





3 





4 





14 





4 





13 





4 





3 





3 





5 





350 


, 1 








5 


48 


1 


1,114 



froT^a'y ^ Totalcost 



358 
5,000 



300 
1,200 



3,616 



I,4C0 
3,915 



6,200 
8,600 

1,673 
3,477 
3,600 
1,007 



3,500 
15,870 
7,200 
(') 
4,500 
8, 144 
326,481 
"2,. 500 



9,661 
2,500 
1,826 
9,240 
3,375 



186,577 i 128 
200 129 



228 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

requii-ed. 



Year 
when 
found- I 



ILLIN 01 S— Continued. 
Rock Island: 

Prince Hall Masonic Home 



Grand Lodge of 



Colored Ma 
lUinois. 
ShermervOle: 

St. Ann's Home for the Aged Sister Servants of the Holy Ghost. 

Springfield; 

■ ig's Daughters' Home for Women I King's Daughters . 

"■ cki- - 



Black avenue. 



sters of St. Francis. 



St. Joseph's Home 

South Sixth street. 
Sullivan: 

Illinois Masonic Home ] Grand Lodge of Illino 



Soldiers' Widows' Home ' State of lUinois 

1 
Free Methodist Church. 



Woodstock: 

Old People's Rest Home 



INDIAN TERRITORY. 
Checotah: 

Odd Fellows' Home 



INDIANA, 
AvLUa: 

Old People's Home 



Independent Order of Odd Fellows. 



Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred 
Heart. 
EvansvOle: , 

Home for the Aged ' Little Sisters of the Poor 

Lincoln avenue. 



Sisters of St. Benedict 

Independent Order of Odd FeDows. 



IndianapoUs; 

Alpha Home 

1940 Darwin street. 



Alpha Home Association. 



, Hartwig Kalley National Home Mis- 
sionary Association. 

Home for the Aged Little Sisters of the Poor 

Lafayette: 

St. Anthony's Home ' Sisters of St. Francis 

Twenty-second and Cason streets. 
State Soldiers' Home State of Indiana 



National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. 
Mexico: 

Old Folks and Orphan Children's Home 

New Albany: 

Old Ladies' Home 

704 East Main street. 
Newport: 

Collett Home 

Richmond: 

Margaret Smith Home 

Seventeenth and Main streets. 



Private corporation 

Drusilla Home Society 

United States Government 

German Baptist Brethrens' Church. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 



IOWA. 
Cedar Rapids: 

Home for Aged Women ! Private coi-poration . 

206 North Twelfth street, west. 
Charles City: 

Starr Home for the Aged 

Council Bluffs: 

Christian Home 



Home for the Aged Association . 
Private association 



Mercy Hospital and Home . 



Sisters of Mercy. 

' Opened October, 1903. 



Old men and women, and children 



Aged persons j Not fixed . . . 

Aged women S250 to SoOO. 

Aged persons, and orphans 1 Not fixed . . . 

i 
Aged and infirm ,. .j Not fixed. .. 



Aged and infirm poor ^ ! None. 



Lged and infirm ministers, 
their widows and orphans. 



Indigent Odd Fellows, and their Nc 
wives, widows, and orphans. 



Aged colored women | S25 

1 
Aged, blind, crippled, and incurable. -i Not fixed. 

Aged and Infirm poor ' None 

Aged and infirm 1 Not fixed . 



Aged women S500. . . 

Aged and infirm women S200. . . 

soldiers i None . 

None. 

None. 



Aged persons, and orphans . 
Aged women 



Aged women, and orphai 
Aged and infirm women. 



Women over 60 : 



None. 
SIOO... 



. and infirm 

2 Not reported. 



S300to.?.500. 

S300 to S500. 

None 

None 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



229 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Amount of 



employees. 



from pay I J 



75 
1,005 



2,135 
1,000 

14,056 



2,220 



200 
7,500 

1,036 
1,706 

(») 
91,638 

4,200 I 153; 
154! 



238,052 
4,700 



3 Opened November, 1903. 



230 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 

when 

foimd- 

ed. 



IOWA— Continued. 
Davenport: 

Clarissa C. Cook Home for the Friendless. 
Pine and Bowditch streets. 



Des Moines: 

Home for the Aged 

Twenty-eighth street and University ave- 
nue. 
Dubuque; 

St. Anthony's Home for the Aged 



KANSAS. 
Fort Dodge: 

Kansas State Soldiers' Home. 



Hutchinson: 

Old Folks and Orphans' Home 

Leavenworth: 

Kansas State Protective Home 

610 Fifth avenue. 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers . 



"William Small Memorial Home for 
728 North Broadway. 
Topeka: 

Ingleside Home 

Wichita: 

Kansas Masonic Home 



Women. 



KENTUCKY. 
Covington: 

Home for Aged and Indigent Women 
Seventh and Garrard streets. 



McAlester Memorial Episcopal Church Home 
Third and Walnut streets. 

Odd Fellows' Widows' and Oi-phans' Home. . 
611 West Sixth street. 
Louisville: 

Church Home and Infirmary 

1208 Morton avenue. 



Home for the Aged 

Tenth and Magazine streets. 
Masonic Widows and Orphans' Home and 
flrmary. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 



Sisters of Mercy . 
Sisters of Mercy. 



Reorganized Church of Jesus Clu'ist 
of Latter Day Saints. 

State of Iowa 



Independent Order of Odd FeUows . 



Association. 



State of Kansas 

German Bantist Brethren of Kansas. 



United States Government. 
Private coi-poration 



Private corporation 

Masonic Fraternity of Kansas; 



Psivate corporation . , 
Private corporation . 
Associated Charities . 



Private corporation 

Christ Chm-ch Cathedral 

Independent Order of Odd FeUows 

Episcopal Chui'ch 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Masonic Fraternity of Kentucky. . 

Sisters of Charity 

Private corporation 



State of Kentucky . 



Masonic Fraternity of Kentucky. 
1 Not reported. 



Aged and infirm 

Aged and needy farmers 

Aged and infirm 

Aged homeless men and 

Aged and infirm 

Soldiers and saUors and then- wives 
and widows, and army nurses. 

Old, infirm, and indigent Odd Fellows 
and their orphans. 

Aged persons, and orphans , 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and destitute soldiers and their 
wives, widows, and orphans. 

Aged and infirm, and orphans 

Aged women, and orphans 

Aged and dependent soldiers and sail- 
ors. 
Women over 60 years 

Aged and working women 

Dependent Masons, and their widows 
and orphans. 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged persons, and orphans 

Homeless and incurable 

Colored orphans, abandoned cluldren 

and aged women. 
Needy women and children 

Widows and childi-en of deceased Odd 
Fellows. 

Aged and infii-m, and working women 

Aged women 

Aged destitute 

Destitute widows and orphans of de- 
ceased Masons. 
Blind and crippled men under 60 years 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and dependent Confederate sol- 
diers. 

Old, infirm, and destitute Masons. . - 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
$200... 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
SSOO... 



$300... 
None. 

None. 
None. 



None. 
None. 
None. 

None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
SIOO... 



None. 
None. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



231 



NUMBER OF IKMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Men. Women. Children. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 



Men. Women. Children, i Men. Women. Children, 



Amount of Income 



ll,6ti4 
2,340 



2,. 504 172 
933 , 173 






50,415 


174 


130 


700 


175 


87 


651 


176 





396,200 


177 





1,200 


]78 


400 


1,500 


179 





8,000 


180 


300 


2,. 500 


181 


144 


472 


182 



232 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared lor. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



LOUISIANA. 
New Orleans: 

Faith Home 

Pitts and Roberts streets. 
Fink Asylum 

3643 Camp street. 
German Protestant Bethany Home 

North Claiborne avenue and Allen street. 
German Protestant Home for the Aged and Infirm 

5919 Magazine street. 
Home for the Aged 

Johnson and Laharpe streets. 
Home for the Aged 

3618 Prytania street. 

Julius AVeis Home for Aged and Infirm 

Lepers' Home - 

Office 913 Hennen Building. 
Maison Hospitaliere 

822 Barracks street. 
New Orleans Home for Inciu-ables 

612 Henry Clay avenue. 
St. Anna's Asylum 

1823 Prytania street. 

Soldiers' Home of Louisiana 

Shreveport: 

Home for the Homeless 

MAINE. 
Auburn: 

Auburn Home for Aged Women 

Augusta: 

St. Mark's Home 

57 Winthrop street. 
Bangor: 

Home for Aged Men 

Home for Aged Women 

277 State street. 
Bath: 

Home for Aged Couples and Old Men 

Old Ladies' Home 

Lewiston: 

Lewiston Home for Aged Women 

297 Main street. 
Norway: 

Norway Home for Aged Women 

Portland: 

Home for Aged Men 

117 Danforth street. 

Home for Aged Women 

Emery street. 

St. Joseph's Home and Hospital 

120 Walton street. 
Rockland: 

Home for Aged Women 

North Main street and Broadway. 
Saco: 

Wardwell Home for Old Ladies 

Togus: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers 

MARYLAND. 
AnnapoUs : 

Chase Home 

Baltimore: 

Aged Men and Women's Home 

214 West Lee street. 
Aged Women's and Aged Men's Home 

Lexington and Calhoun streets. 
Augsburg Home for Orphans and the Aged 

746 West I>exington street. 
General German Aged People's Home 

West Baltimore and Payson streets. 
Hebrew Friendly Inn and Aged Home 

11.53 East Lombard street. 
Hebrew Hospital and Asylum (Home Department) 

Monument and Ann streets. 
Home for the Aged 

Preston and VaUey streets. 
Home for Confederate Mothers and Widows 

(Millwood.) 

1 Not reported. 



First District Baptist Association. . . 

Private corporation , 

German Protestant Bethany Society. 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor 



Benevolent Association. 
State of Louisiana 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
State of Louisiana.. 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation. 
St. Mark's Church... 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



King's Daughters and King's So 
Private association 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Sisters of Mercy 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

United States Government. 



Aged colored 

Protestant widows and then- cliildren. 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infi rm 



None 

None 

Not fLxed . 

None 

None 

None 



Aged and infirm. 
Lepers 



Aged women . 



AU incurables, except bUnd, imbecile, 
consumptive, cancer, and epileptic. 

Destitute females and their helpless 
children. 

Confederate veterans , 



Destitute women . 



Aged and infirm women over 70 years 
Aged women 



None. 
None. 

None. 

None. 

None. 

None. 

None. 

$200... 
None. 



Indigent aged men 

d women over 60 years , 



Not fixed. 
SlOO 



Aged couples and aged men . 
Women over 65 years 



Aged women. 
Aged women . 



Aged men 

American women over 60 years 



$200 to $500. 
$200toS300. 

$200 

$150 to $200. 
None 



Aged women SlOO. 

Aged women j SloO. 

Aged and disabled soldiers and sailors None 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Evangelical Lutheran Association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

2 Home at 



Aged, infirm, and destitute women. . . 

Needy and worthy aged and infirm 

colored persons. 
Aged men £ 



Aged persons, and orphans . 
Aged persons 



Aged persons and shelterless stran- 
gers. 
Men and women over 60 years 



None 

.SlOO 

.«200to.?300. 
$150 to 8300. 
$100toS350. 

None 

None 

None 

None 



1887 
1869 



1850 



1875 
1903 



1900 
(') 



1891 
1867 
1869 



Indian Camp (Island P. O.). 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 



233 



OR ADUJ.TS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 


































Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


ChUdren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


ChUdren. 















17 








(>) 








0) 


C 


1 


S420 


SO 


S648 


195 





67 


7 





10 








10 





9 








8,083 


196 


8 







5 







7 


9 





1 





75 


900 


197 


22 


24 





5 


1 





IS 


24 





2 


240 


327 


2,113 


198 


93 


101 





24 


23 





91 


107 














7,140 


199 


99 


115 





24 


32 





65 


112 














4,000 


200 


19 


10 














13 


10 





3 








9,000 


201 


21 


18 


3 


g 


g 





25 


17 













12,000 


202 





33 








37 








37 








516 





724 


203 





31 


1 





6 


1 





32 





8 


700 


7 


1,149 


204 





56 


20 





10 


■ 5 





58 


24 


5 


252 





8,000 


205 


141 








10 








134 








16 







20,000 


206 





10 








(') 








0) 





] 


600 





0) 


207 





9 

















8 





2 





1,700 


1,265 


208. 





12 








1 








9 





4 





1,665 


3,391 


209 


1 








3 








1 








2 





202 


412 


210 





25 








1 








25 





6 





560 


4,643 


211 


10 








2 








10 








4 





100 


1,800 


212 





10 








2 








12 





3 








2,000 


213 





7 








7 








8 





1 





(') 


(") 


214- 





7 








1 








8 











1,700 


950 


215- 


11 








5 








12 








4 








3,300 


216. 





28 








2 








27 





9 








7,060 


217 





40 








7 








40 





1 





2,800 


3,500 


218; 





. 3 








1 








4 





1 





200 


900 


219 





15 














° 


15 





4 








2,750 


220 


2, 82.5 








296 








2,653 








481 







343,761 


221. 




6 

















6 





3 





1,017 


2,243 


222 


6 


11 





2 


1 





6 


11 





3 





0) 


l,.3O0 


223 


43 


73 





4 


11 





44 


76 





18 


3,000 


3,820 


15,495 


224 


8 


11 


21 


8 


14 


26 


7 


13 


25 


3 








2,834 


225 


28 


43 





1 


3 





25 


41 





6 


1,500 


560 


6,319 


226 


9 


6 





2 


1 





. 11 


7 





4 


500 





3,496 


227 


13 


18 





7 


6 





11 


21 





(') 


C) 


(*) 


(*) 


22S 


120 


140 





45 


50 





120 


145 











Q) 


Q) 


229 





14 








1 








15 





^ 


2, 500 


' 


2,100 


230 



5 Opened November, 



' Included in hospital department. 



234 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintamed by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 
Bn trance fee 
required. 



Year 
when 
found- 



MARYLAND— Continued. 

Baltimore— Continued. 

Home for Incurables 

Twenty-first street and Guilford 
Home for the Aged of the Methodist Episcopal 
Church. 

Fulton avenue and FrankUn street. 

St. Ann's Home for Aged Women 

1200 North Caroline street. 

Shelter for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons 

."iiy West Biddle street. 
Easton: 

Home for the Aged 



Frederick: 

Home for the Aged 

Pikes ville: 

Maryland Line Confederate Soldiers' Home. 



Salisbury Home for the Aged. 



MASSACHUSETTS. 
Amesbury: 

Amesbury and Salisbury Home for Aged Women. 
276 Main street. 
Beverly: 

Old Ladies' Home 



Boston: 

Boston Home for Incurables 

2049 Dorchester avenue (Dorchester). 

Burnap Free Home for Aged AVomen 

19 Common street. 



; Consumptives' Home , . 

Blue HOI avenue and Seaver street (Dor- 
chester) . 



Home for the Aged 

424 Dudley street. 
Leopold Morse Home and Orphanage. . . 

(Mattapan.) 
Mt. Pleasant Home 

3 Northern avenue (Dorchester). 



St. Francis Home and Orphanage 

Fulda and Ellis streets (Roxbury). 



Braintree: 

Old People's Home 

Brockton: 

Wales Home for Aged Women 

S5.S North Main street. 
Cambridge: 

Baptist Home 

308 Brookllne street. 
Cambridge Home for Aged People. 
360 Mt. Auburn street. 
Chelsea: 

Old Ladies' Home 

Washington square. 
Soldiers' Home in Massachusetts . . 



Private corporation. 

Methodist Episcopal 
timore. 

Private association . 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation. 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation. 



Incurable women. 
Aged and infirm . . 



S.500. 
$200. 



Old ladies | None . 

Aged and infirm colored women | $150.. . 



$250... 

; and None. 



Private corporation 

Methodist Protestant Church. 



Persons over 60 years . . . 

Indigent ex-Confederate 
sailors. 

Female epileptics j None . 

Aged and infirm persons $100. 

persons $300. 



Private corporation 

Old Ladies' Home Society. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Aged and infirm women 

Aged women 

Incurables 

Aged, friendless, and indigent 

Incurable women 

Consumptive poor 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Trinity Episcopal Chvu-ch 

Private corporation ' Women 65 years and over . 

Sisters of St. Francis i Aged women, and orphans 

Private corporation I Women over 60 years 

Private association Aged men and women 

Private corporation Women over 70 years 



Consumptives 

Aged and infirm colored women. . 

Aged couples 

Aged and indigent men 

Aged women 

Aged poor 

Aged Hebrews, and orphans 

Aged, infirm, blind, and crippled. 
Aged 



Baptist churches in Massachusetts. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

State of Massachusetts. 



Aged ' 

Aged and infirm 

Protestant women over 60 years 

Soldiers and sailors of the Civil and 
Spanish wars. 

- Opened in June, 1903. 



$100 

$100 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

$400-= 

$150 

$150 

None 

None 

Not fixed... 

None 

$300 

None 

$100 

Not fixed... 
{■') 

$200 

$300 to $450. 

$150 

None 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 235 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 







NUMBER OF INMATES. 




























Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amoimt of 
aimual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

frpm pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 











32 








6 








37 





11 


$2,500 


$0 


$7,000 


231 


4 


81 





4 


8 





7 


79 





10 





G) 


9,346 


232 


° 


19 








6 








16 





3 





1,400 


1,400 


233 





3.5 

















32 





4 








3,602 


234 





.5 








6 








10 





3 


1,000 


600 


1,800 


235 





14 








1 








15 





5 





500 


3,0.50 


236 


106 








13 








109 








7 


12,000 





12,030 


237 





15 


4 





1 







13 


5 


7 








3, 502 


238 


1 


6 





1 


2 





2 


7 





3 


750 


O 


O 


2.39 





4 








2 








5 





2 





900 


" 


240 





5 








1 








6 





2 





100 


1,043 


241 





7 

















7 





2 








1,435 


242 


14 


27 


9 


1 


3 


5 


14 


24 


12 


26 





1,927 


16,6.50 


243 





10 

















8 





2 


100 





2,216 


244 





15 








30 








15 





6 








5,284 


245 


16 


16 





51 


32 





10 


18 





20 


" 





1,107 


246 


20 


8 





0) 


0) 


0) 


17 


8 


3 


9 








10, 000 


247 





20 








20 








20 





6 





,24 


5,043 


248 


20 


34 





2 


2 





22 


33 





15 








11,230 


249 


45 


. 





6 








42 








15 








21,398 


2,50 





88 








10 








90 





30 





600 


.36,000 


251 


106 


124 





21 


29 





106 


124 





0^ 








6,040 


252 


2 


3 


38 


1 


4 


15 


3 


5 


47 


8 








9,546 


2.53 


7 


17- 





5 


4 





11 


13 





7 





5,070 


5, 705 


254 





17 

















17 





5 





2,836 


5,081 


255 





29 








2 








29 





7 




185 


7,960 


256 





10 


28 





3 


15 





8 


31 


2 




1,577 


3,632 


257 





'32 








5 








35 





« 




700 


7,380 


258 


3 


6 





4 


6 





4 


6 





2 




780 


900 


259 





16 








1 








15 





4 




250 


2,099 


260 


3 


28 








8 





2 


31 





9 








7,000 


261 


3 


22 








3 





3 


25 





7 





1,800 


7,497 


262 





9 


0' 





1 








9 





^ 2 





69 


1,650 


263 


377 








276 1 

1 





427 








81 







71,304 


264 








• For each couple. 



'S250 and property. 



236 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERJ.1ANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Special class cared lor. 



Amount of 

entrance lee 

requii-ed. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 
Concord: 

Concord Home for the Aged 

FaU River: 

Home for Aged People 

1168 Highland avenue.' 
Fitohburg: 

Fitchburg Home for Old Ladies 

Cedar and Orange streets. 
Framingham : 

Home for Aged Men and Women in Framingham. 

Gardner: 

Gardner Home lor Elderly People 

Ifi2 Pearl street. 
Georgetown: 

Carleton Home '. 

Gloucester: 

GUhert Home for Aged and Indigent Persons . . . 
1 Western avenue. 

Huntress Home 

110 Prospect street. 
Haverhill: 

Old Ladies' Home - 

Holyoke: 

Father Harkin's Home lor Aged Women 

102 Elm street. 
Lawrence: 

Lawrence Home lor Aged People 

Leominster: 

Leominster Home lor Old Ladies 

Lowell: 

Battles Home lor Aged Men 

15 Belmont street. 

Old Ladies' Home 

520 Fletcher street. 
Lynn: 

Lynn Home lor Aged Women 

197 North Common street. 
Maiden: 

Maiden Home lor Aged Persons 

526-528 Main street. 
Medlord: 

Medlord Home for Aged Men and Women 

66 South street. 
New Bedford: 

New Bedford Home lor the Aged 

121 Cedar street. 

St. Mary's Home 

Hampton and Liberty streets 
Newburyport: 

Home lor Aged Men 

331 High street. 

Old Ladies' Home 

75 High street. 
Newton: 

Newton Home lor Aged People 

277 Elliott street (Newton Upper Falls). 
Northampton: 

Home for Aged and Invalid Women 

236 South street. 
Peabody: 

Sutton Home lor Aged Women 

Pittsfield: 

Berkshire County Home lor Aged Women 

89 South 'street. 
Plymouth: 

Ryder Home for Old People 

Pondville: 

King's Daughters and Sons' Home lor the Aged 
Quincy: 

National Sailors' Home 

Sailors' Snug Harbor of Boston 

Reading: 

Reading Home lor Aged Women 

S8 Linden street. 
Salem. 

Bertram Home lor Aged Men 

114 Derby street. 

City Orphan Asylum 

215 Lalayette street. 

Home for Aged and Destitute Women 

SomervQle: 

Home lor the Aged 

186 Highland avenue. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Aged and infirm. 
Aged men and wc 



Aged and infirm . 
Aged persons 



Private corporation. . 
Private coi-poration . . 
Private coi'poration . . 
Private corporation . . 
Sisters of Providence. 
Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 
Private corporation . . 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Men and women over 70 years . . 

Aged and infirm 

Indigent females over 60 years. 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and infirm 

Aged women 

Aged and indigent men 

Aged women 

Aged and infirm women 

Protestants over 65 years 

Aged persons 



SlOO 

S300 

Not fixed . 



Not fixed. 

S250 

S200 



S200. 
S200. 
S275. 
S200. 



Private corporation Aged and infirm 

Private corporation i Aged and infirm , and orphans . 



None. 
None. 



Private corporation Men over 65 years . 



Private corporation Aged persons 

Private corporation Aged and infirm women . 



Private corporation . 
Berkshire county . . . 



Private corporation 

King's Daughters and Sons . . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters ol Charity 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters ol the Poor 

1 Not reported. 



Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm women . 



$300. 



Men and women over 60 years. 
Aged worthy poor 



Aged and infirm sailors. 
Aged women 



Orphan and abandoned children, and 

old ladies and invalids. 
Aged and destitute women , 



SlOO. . . 
.?300. . . 
None. 
None. 
$200... 
None. 
None. 
S65.... 
None. 



1896 
1902 



1902 
1867 



1865 
1852 
1899 
1877 
1866 
1860 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



237 







NUMBER OF INMATES. 




























Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




- Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


, Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 










2 


1 





1 








3 








2 


SO 


$1,080 


SI, 593 


265 


5 


17 








3 





5 


19 





« 





600 


8,005 


266 





13 








1 








13 





3 





200 


2,420 


267 


3 


6 








1 





2 


7 





2 








2,526 


268 





6 


« 














6' 





5 





150 


1,492 


269 


' 





« 











1 


,0 





1 





243 


610 


270 


2 


3 








' 





1 


4 





2 








1,834 


271 





12 





j 1 








12 





3 





300 


2,713 


272 





24 














25 





5 





96 


3,884 


273 





■50 








24 








57 











5,779 


3,638 


274 


2 


11 








1 





2 


12 





2 





750 


2,523 


275 


' 


7 








1 








8 





2 








2,666 


276 


3 








1 








3 








1 





Q) 


900 


277 





34 








15 








41 





6 





400 


4,000 


278 





21 








4 








21 





4 





500 


1,951 


279 





18 





1 


5 





1 


21 





5 





1,100 


4,829 


280 


1 


« 





0. 








1 


8 





2 





48 


1,972 


281 


1 


3 








2 


G 





2 





1 





131 


556 


282 




14 


90 








52 


1 


13 


101 











2,410 


283 


7 








1 








6 








1 


68 


400 


1,050 


284 





15 








1 








14 





s 








2,4.50 


285 


1 


14 





1 


1 





2 


13 





5 





650 


4,004 


286 





9 








3 








10 





4 





1,090 


2,295 


287 





8 








1 








9 





2 








1,642 


. 





22 








4 








22 





7 




1,200 


5,808 




1 


7 








1 





1 


7 





1 








1,350 


290 


3 


4 








1 


° 


3 


5 





3 








1,200 


291 


27 








11 








25 








17 





610 


10,500 


292 


28 








9 








3 








5 


■ 





6,605 


293 





10 








1 








7 





1 





172 


1,317 


294 


! 17 








2 








16 








4 








6,212 


295 


2 


34 


119 





74 


140 


2 


52 


150 


24 





10,041 


13,214 


296 





22 








4 








22 





6 





195 


7,543 


297 


120 


150 





25 


32 


» 


120 


150 














8,000 


298 



238 



benp:volent institutions. 

Table 3.— PERXL^NENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



\ME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 
wlien 
found- 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 

Somerville — Continued. 

Somerville Home for the Aged 

7 Grandvlew avenup. 
Springfield: 

Home for Aged Men 

74 Walnut street. 

Home for Aged Women 

471 Chestnut street. 
Taunton: 

Old Ladies' Home 

96 Broadway. 
Wakefield: 

Wakefield Home for Aged Women 

Waltham: 

Leland Home 

21 Newton street. 
West-field: 

Westfield Home for Aged People . : 

Winchester: 

Home for Aged People in Winchester 

Wobum: 

Woburn Home for Aged Men 

74 Elm street (North Woburn). 
Worcester: 

Home for Aged and Day Nursery 

10 Liberty street. 

Home for Aged Men in Worcester 

1199 Main street. 

Home for Aged AVomen in Worcester 

1183 Main street. 

Odd Fellows' Home of Massachusetts 

North avenue. 

St. Francis Home for the Aged 

10 Bleeker street. 

St. Vincent's Home 

Winthrop and N'ernon streets. 

MICHIGAN. 
Battle Creek: 

James White Memorial Home 

31 Aldrich street. 
Bay City: 

Woman's Home 

Fourth and Monroe streets. 
Detroit: 

Arnold Home for the Aged : 

114 Selden avenue. 

Christ Church Home 

242 Woodbridge street east. 
German Protestant Some for Orphans and Old 
People. 

250 Harvey avenue. 

Home for the Aged 

Orleans and Scott streets. 

Phyllis Wheatley Home 

176 East EUzabeth street. 

St. Luke's Church Home 

Fort street and McKinstry avenue. 

Smith-Fox Home 

139-143 Lincoln avenue. 

Thompson Home for Old Ladies 

Cass and Hancock avenues. 
Fenton: 

Baptist Ministers' Home 

Grand Rapids: 

Holland Union Benevolent Association Home 

24-5 North College avenue. 
Home for the Aged 

158 South Lafayette street. 
Michigan Masonic Home 

(Reeds Lake.) 
Micliigan Soldiers' Home 

Woman's Home and Hospital 

69 Bostwick street. 
Jackson: 

Home for the Friendless 

302 Clinton street. 
Marshall: 

Dulcenia Home 

Monroe: 

Old Folks' Home 

South Haven: 

Old People's Charitable Home 



Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private coi-poration . 
Private corporation . 



Aged men and women S200. 



Aged men ?400. 

Aged and infirm women S500. 

Women over 60 years S150. 

Aged and infirm women over 60 years. S150. 
Aged women : .S1.50. 



Aged and infirm ; Not fixed . 

Aged men and women \ •?200 

Aged women .S200 



Aged, crippled, or bhnd women ?100. 

Aged and infirm men ' .?200. 

Unmarried women 65 years and over. . -5250. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows . .' Aged and indigent Odd Fellows and ; None, 
theii' wives, -widows, and oiphans. 

Little Franciscan Sisters of Mary Aged, infirm, blind, incurable, or None. 

I crippled 
Sisters of Providence ' Aged and infirm ^1 .000 . 



Seventh Day Adventists Aged and homeless . 

Private corporation i Aged and destitute ^ 

Private association i Aged women 



None. 



Christ Episcopal Church 

German Evangelical churches . 



Aged, infirm, blind, and crippled. 



Aged and infirm over 60 years, and 
orphan and destitute children. 



Little Sisters of the Poor j Aged and destitute 

Private corporation ' Aged and infirm colored women . 



Episcopal churches of Michigan ' Aged, infirm, incurable, blind, 

crippled. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Baptist Ministers' Aid Society. . 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Masonic Fraternity of Michigan. 
State of Michigan 



Private association. 
Private corporation . 
Lutheran churches . . 



Sebastian Michels 

' Opened May 1, 1904. 



Aged and incurable . 
Aged women 



Aged Baptist ministers and their 
wives and dependent children. 



Aged and infirm 

Aged men and women . 



Aged, infirm, and sick women. 
Aged and infirm women 

Dependent 

Persons over 60 years. 

Aged and infirm 



over bO years 



$300toS500.. 

Not fixed 

None 

$300 toS500.. 

None 

S300 

None 

S400 to SI ,000. 
$500 to .?1, 000. 

.?100 

Not fixed 

None 

None I 

None 

S300to.S500 j 

None 



$500 

Not fixed . 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 239 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 






























Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 
























Men. 


Women. 


ChUdren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 












1 


5 





1 


2 





1 


7 





2 


SO 


SI, 400 


SI, 015 


299 


(1) 


(') 


(') 


3 








3 








2 





0) 


(1) 


300 





28 








6 








32 





6 





3,. 500 


6,000 


301 





14 

















14 





4 





450 


3,461 


302 





3 








3 








5 





3 








1,482 


303 





11 








3 


° 


« 


3 





5 





564 


2,219 


304 


(') 


(1) 


(') 


1 


7 








6 





2 





(') 


(I) 305 





3 








2 








4 





"l 








1,318 


306 





' 








3 


* 





« 





3 





200 


2,100 


307 





2 











» 





2 





■ 1 





50 


192 


308 


6 








1 








7 








1 





300 


1,345 


309 





25 


• . 





1 








24 





6 





500 


7,581 


310 


38 


14 





■ 22 


9 





50 


23 





14 








14,512 


311 


25 


22 





37 


36 





31 


29 





2 





2,845 


5,567 


312 


30 


46 





(•-) 


{■') 





18 


46 





16 





{-} 


(2) 


313 


10 


21 





5 


1 





8 


20 





5 





1,125 


3,507 314 





15 








2 








14 


6 


4 





424 


1,758 


315 


1 


- 23 





1 


9 





2 


28 





3 





1,800 


2,300 


316 





V 


1 













6 


1 


3 





200 


1,356 


317 


9 


3 


62 


1 


1 


24 


9 


3 


62 


6 





2,700 


5,334 


318 


87 


87 





48 


27 


. 


102 


88 











• 814 


4,581 


319 





" 10 








2 








10 





3 





150 


708 


320 


10 


20 





5 


fi 





11 


20 





10 





899 


8,302 


321 


8 


45 





7 


43 





4 


66 


' 


7 





8,640 


4,200 


322 





31 








2 








31 





6 





700 


6,000 


323 


3 


13 








1 





3 


13 





6 





120 


2,249 


324 


22 


15 





4 


3 





23 


16 





6 





1,600 


3,000 


325 


86 


50 





30 


18 





22 


13 





■ 








4,000 


326 


43 


9 





12 


2 





44 


8 





- 8 








7,000 


327 


818 


7B 





528 


39 





910 


79 


i 


200 




2,031 


127,569 


328 





14 








51- 







6 





5 


1,306 


2,004 


2,327 


329 


» 


13 








8 








15 





1 


180 


676 


1,400 


330 





10 








1 








11 


° 


3 








1,938 


331 


30 


22 





2 


2 





26 


23 





3 





2,775 


6,731 


332 


8 


23 





3 


10 





9 


24 





2 


800 


2,032 


3,. 500 


.333 



• Included in St. Vincent's Hospital. 



240 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOLIES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



MINNESOTA. 
Anoka: 

Ladies of the G. A. R. Home 

Belle Plalne: 

Evangelical Lutheran Home 

Minneapolis: 

Home for the Aged 

215 Broad way NE. 
Home for Children and Aged AVomen 

3200 Stevens avenue. 
Minnesota Soldiers' Home 

(Minnehaha.) 
New Ulm; 

St. Alexander Home 

Northfield: 

Minnesota Odd Fellows' Home 

St. Cloud: 

St. Joseph's Home 

St. Paul: 

Church Home of Minnesota 

230 Hoflman avenue. 

Home for the Aged 

90 Wilken street. 

MISSISSIPPI. 
Beauvoir: 

Confederate Soldiers' Home 

MISSOURI. 
HigginsvUle: 

Confederate Soldiers' Home 

Kansas City: 

George H. Nettleton Home for Aged Women. 
Seventh' street and Pennsylvania 

Home for the Aged 

Thirty-first and Locust streets. 

Old Folks and Orphans' Home 

2446 Michigan avenue. 
Liberty: 

Odd Fellows' Home 

St. James: 

State Federal Soldiers' Home 

St. Joseph: 

Memorial Home 

Main street. 
St. Louis: 

Bethesda Hospital and Home for Incurables. 

3649 Vista avenue. 
Bethesda Old Ladies' Home 

3120 Lafayette avenue. 
Emergency Home and Hospital 

3108 Pine street. 
Home for Aged and Infirm IsraeUtes 

3652 South Jefferson avenue. 
Home for the Aged 

Cherokee street and Grand avenue. 
Home for the Aged 

2209 Herbert street. 
Home of the Friendless 

4431 South Broadway. 
Masonic Home of Missouri 

5351 Delmar boulevard. 
Memorial Home 

Grand and Magnolia avenues. 
Old Folks' Home 

Eugenia street near Railroad avenue. 
Old People's Home 

4237 Cote BrUliante avenue. 
Poor Saints' Home 

2314 Morgan street. 
St. Aim's Widows' Home 

1236 North Tenth street. 
St. Louis Altenhetm 

5408-5450 South Broadway. 
Widows and Orphans' Home 

1701 Lucas 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Ladies of the G. A. R. of Minnesota. 

Evangelical Lutheran Sjaiods of Min- 
nesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, and 
other states. 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

State of Minnesota 

Sisters of the Poor Handmaids of 
Jesus Christ. 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows 
of Minnesota. 

Sisters of St. Benedict 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Jefferson Davis Memorial Home 
Association. 

State of Missouri 

Private association 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private association 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Missouri. 

State of Missouri 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Jewish Charitable and Educational 

XInion of St. Louis. 
Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private coi-poration 

Masonic Fraternity of Missouri 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

Central Baptist Church 

Sisters of Charity 

St. Louis Altenlieim Society .... 

Private coi-poration 

1 Not reported. 



Special class cared for. 



Aged and infirm 

Aged men and women 

Aged and infirm 

Women over 60 years, and children . 

Disabled ex-soldiers, sailors, and 
marines. 

Aged men and women 

Indigent Odd Fellows and their wives 
and orphan children. 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 



Aged and infirm Confederate soldiers. 

Helpless ex-Confederate soldiers and 
then- families. 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and infirm 

Homeless colored women and children 

Indigent Odd Fellows and then- 
families. 

Indigent ex-soldiers and their wives 
and widows. 

Aged men and women 

Incurables 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and infirm, and children 

Aged and infirm Israelites 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 

Aged, destitute, and friendless women 

Aged and infirm Masons and their 

families. 
Aged and indigent 

Aged and decrepit colored persons . . . 

Aged and infir m men and women, 

and cliildren. 
Aged and infirm colored persons 

Aged and infirm widows 

Aged men and women 

Aged women, widows vidth their 
children, and orphans. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 
when 
found- 



None 


1898 


$500 


1898 


None 




$1300 


1881 


None 


1887 


None 


1884 


None 




Not fixed 


1900 


$300 




None 


1883 


None 


1903 


None 


1891 


S200 


1890 


None 


1882 


None 




None 


1895 


None 


1897 


S200 




None 


1896 


None 




S200 


1895 


None 


1882 


None 


1900 


None 


1869 


.?200 


18.. 


None 


1889 


S200toS300 


1882 


SSO 


1903 


Not fixed 


1899 


None 


1892 


None 


1853 


S200 


1901 


None 


1901 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 241 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 




Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 






On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 


Number 

ol paid 

employees. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 








2 


5 








4 








9 








S576 


SO 


81,220 


334 


13 


' 


1 


12 


« 


1 


13 


6 


' 


2 





1,700 


1,500 


335 


50 


55 





(1) 


('), 





0) ■ 


w 














0) 


336 





20 


91 





2 


37 





17 


90 


19 





3,721 


14,854 


337 


388 








134 








384 








60 







65,463 
(2) 


338 


(-) 


C) 


C^) 


i^) 


(=) 


(2;- 


(2) 


C) 


C) 








(■') 


339 


10 


6 


11 


1 


1 


4 


6 


6 


11 


8 








26,000 


340 


25 


23 





. 15 


11 





26 


21 





7 


120 


,5,657 


5,406 


341 


1 


16 





1 


8 





2 


18 





3 





1,866 


4,000 


342 


79 


57 





38 


16 





75 


70 














0) 


343 


15 





• 


49 








' 40 








5 


0) 





(') 


344 


185 



21 
30 


6 



50 



3 
3 


1 




216 



21 
31 





23 

4 








5,202 


345 
346 





100 


55 





24 


7 





32 


48 











96 


2,000 


347 





7 


9 





10 


14 





5 


= 


2 





75 


1,010 


348 


19 


13 


66 


4 


' 


16 


19 


14 


75 


12 





820 


12,219 


349 


155 


57 





49 


11 





178 


66 





21 







24,235 
2,000 


350 
351 




23 







5 





9 


23 





7 








21 


59 





28 


96 


48 


8 


66 


16 


6 








S,447 


352 





2fi 


0. 





30 








21 














2,000 


353 


7 


"13 


9 


20 


36 


65 


3 


10 


12 








959 


2,020 


354 


15 


15 





1 








11 


. 14 





6 








5,480 


355 


30 


50 





26 


30 





45 
















4,382 


356 


128 


112 





28 


22 





118 


112 














7,188 


357 





76 








5 








75 





16 





2,205 


15,231 


358 


33 


32 


75 


3 


5 


13 


34 


32 


76 


15 








21,133 


359 


67 


27 





13 


8 





63 


35 





9 





3,100 


10,357 


360 


2 


3 





1 


5 





1 


8 





1 





45 


81 


361 


4 


14 


4 


4 


8 





4 


14 


4 


3 





300 


2,500 


362 


2 


6 














2 


6 














750 


363 





34 








6 








31 





8 





2,694 


3,000 


364 


20 


39 





2 


4 





18 


41 





7 








7,792 


365 





9 


15 





(') 


(I) 





9 


15 


2 





(') 


(') 


366 



- Included in St. .Alexander Hospital. 



242 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3,— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



MONTANA. 
Butte: 

Paul Clark Home 

Excelsior avenue and Mercury street. 

Columbia Falls: 

Montana Soldiers' Home 



NEBRASKA. 
Grand Island: 

Nebraska Soldiers and Sailors' Home — 
Lincoln; 

Tabitha Home 

Fortv-fifth and Randolph streets 
Milford: 

Soldiers and Sailors' Home 

Omaha: 

Old People's Home 

2214 Wirt street. 



NEW HAMPSHIRE. 



sant street. 
New Hampshire Odd Fellows' Home. 



Keene : 

Invalids' Home 

361 Court street. 
Manchester: 

Gale Home 

133 Ash street. 
Masonic Home 

Notre Dame Hospital and Orphanage. 



St. Patrick's Home 

222 Hanover street. 
Nashua: 

John M. Hunt Home 

Main street. 



Portsmouth: 

Home for Aged ^^■omen 

Rochester: 

Gafney Home for the Aged. 



NEW JERSEY. 
Beverly: 

St. Joseph's Home 



Home for Aged People. 



New Jersey Firemen's Home. . , 
Buriington: 

Home for Aged Women 

330 East Union street. 

Masonic Home of New Jersey . . 
Collingswood : 

Home for the Aged and -rm . 

Elizabeth: 

Home for Aged Women 

1073 East Jersey street. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Associated Charities of Butte. 



State of Montana . 



State of Nebraska 

Private corporation 

State of Nebraska 

Women's Christian Association . 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

requii-ed. 



Aged women, and childi-en . 
Aged soldiers 



None. 
None. 



Masonic Grand Lodge of Nebraska- 



Private corporation. 



Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
New Hampshire. 



Private corporation 

Unitarian Society of Keene . 



Private corporation . 



Sisters of Charity. 
Sisters of Mercy . . 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

State of New Hampshire . 



Sisters of St. Francis 

Private corporation 

State of New Jersey 

Private corporation 

Masonic Grand Lodge of New Jersey, 

Methodist Episcopal Church , 

Private corporation 



Aged soldiers and theii' families : None 

Aged and Lnfti-m, and childreri '. . . SlOO to S500 . 

Aged soldiers and sailors | None 

Persons over 0.5 years I S300 



Indigent Masons and their families 



Aged men and women . 
Aged and infir 



Aged women ; S200. . . 

Aged Masons and their families ; None . 



Aged and infirm women . 



Aged couples and aged men . 
Aged women 



Aged women 

Aged men and women- 
Disabled soldiers 



Private association 

Protestant Episcopal Church. 



Aged and tafirm 

Aged men and women 

Aged, urfirm, and crippled firemen 

Aged women 

Indigent Masons and their families . . . 

Aged and infirm members of the 
Methodist Episcopal Church. 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged women and couples 

Aged and infirm women 



Private association . . 
Private corporation - 



Jersey City: 

German Pioneer Home 

Garfield avenue and Dwight street. 

Home for Aged Women 

657 Bergen avenue. 
Kearney: 

New Jersey Home for Disabled Soldiers State of New Jersey 

(Arlington.) I 

1 Opened September 1, 1903. 2 Not open. 



None. 
S300-.. 
None- 
S200. . . 
None. 
S1.50... 



S200- 



None. 



Aged poor over 6.5 years $500. 

Aged women in good health , S200. . - 

Aged and disabled soldiers None . 

3 Opened early in 1904. 



Year 
when ! 
found- 
ed. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



243 







_ NUMBER OF INMATES. 




1 j 


















Nnmhpr 1 Amount of 

nf S»HH ! annual sub- 

em-te'^es.i^sidy^-. 


Income 

fi-om pay 

mmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


.Children. 











3 


29 





1 


42 





2 


36 


3 


SO 


SI, 958 


$3,830 


367 


60 








21 








64 








g 







11,818 


368 


317 


115 





82 


25 





342 


121 





42 







62,865 


369 


17 


11 


48 


15 


27 


5B 


19 


23 


37 


10 





2,710 


9,062 


370 


126 








29 


4 





121 


4 





13 







16,591 


371 


3 


IB 





3 







6 


23 





4 





620 


2,400 


372 


2 


4 


' 


5 


2 


3 


^ 


3 


4 


3 








(') 


373 





22 








2 








23 





6 





200 


4,718 


374 


15 


4 





5 


2 





17 


4 





6 








2,000 


375 


5 


15 





1 


5 





5 


20 





4 





786 


3,804 


376 





« 








11 








7 





2 





1,298 


2,002 


377 





10 








2 








10 





3 





400 


1,966 


378 


(.') 


(') 


C) 


1 


3 





1 


3 





4 





(') 


(') 


379 





25 


140 


125 


206 


121 


9 


28 


114 


20 





6,885 


7,12.5 


380 





29 








3 








28 














W 


381 


8 


2 





1 


1 





7 


2 





4 








2,508 


382 





17 








4 








17 





3 








2,000 


383 





12 








12 








10 





3 


500 





1,200 


384 


(=) 


(■'•) 


e) 


1 


5 





I 


5 





3 





(») 


(') 


385 


81 








15 








71 








14 







23,000 


385 


12 








10 





15 


35 





1 





696 


„ 


5 


30 





6 


3 





8 


29 





6 


' 





4,000 


388 


21 








9 








27 








4 







8,2.33 


339 





13 








3 








14 





2 


300 





1,200 


390 


36 


' 


16 


8 


4 


1 


37 


10 


16 


14 








14,000 


391 


2 


19 














2 


19 





4 





350 


2,800 


392 





22 

















21 





5 








4,071 


393 


1 


18 








3 





1 


18 





4 





600 


2,882 


.394 





8 








3 








7 





2 





480 


1,200 


395 


23 


27 





6 


2 





24 


26 





4 





1, .500 


3,500 


396 





29 








(') 








29 





« 





(.') 


(*) 


397 


507 








162 








489 








15 




7,049 


71,770 


398 





Not reported. 



5 Opened September 12, 1904. 



244 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOLIES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND 



maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amoxint of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



NEW JERSEY-Continued. 
Metuchen : 

Metuchen Home 

New Brunswick: 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum and Home for the Aged 
Easton 



Private corporation. . 
Sisters of St. Francis. 



Newark: 

Baptist Home for the Aged 

285 Roseville avenue. 
Colored Aged Home and Orphanage 
18 Goes place. 



Baptist Home Society of New Jersey 

Private association 

Private corporation 



Protestant Home for Respectable Aged Women. 
225 Mt. Pleasant avenue. 
Newton: 

Merriam Home 



Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

Presbyterian Board of ReUef . 



Paterson; 

Holland Home for the Aged. 
110-112 Iowa avenue. 



Private i 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Trenton: 

Indigent Widows' and Single Women's Home 

Spring street. 

Odd Fellows' Home 

Scotch road and Pennington avenue. 
Vineland : 

State Home lor Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and 
their wives. 



Sisters of Charity 

State of New Jersey 

Private association 

Private association 

Independent Order of Odd_Fellows. 
State of New Jersey 



Private association. 



NEW YORK. 
Albanv: 

Albany Guardian Society and Home for the Friend- 
less. 

553 Clinton avenue. 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of St. Domini 



(North Amityvi; 



6 Mohawk place. 
Bath: 

New York State Soldiers and Sailors' Home . . 
BiQghamton: 

Home for Aged Women 

58 Fairview avenue. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

74 Conklin avenue. 
Brooklyn: '' 

Baptist Home of Brooklyn 

Greene and Throop avenues. 
Brooklyn Home for Aged Colored People 

St. Johns place and Kingston avenue. 
Brooklyn Home for Aged Men 

745 Classon avenue. 



Private corporation 

State of New York 

Private corporation 

Episcopal Church 

Baptist churches of Long Island. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 





None 






Aged and friendless men and women . . 


.S200 


Aged and infirm 


S150 to -S'^OO 


Aged and feeble men and women 


SI, 000 






Aged and destitute 


None 




S200 


Aged Presbyterian ministers and 
their families. 












None. 


Aged and homeless women 


S200 


Old, infirm, and incurable 


S200 


All incurables, except insane, epilep- 
tic, and contagious. 


None 




Epileptics 


None 


Aged and infirm 


Notfixed 


Aged and-indigent widows and single 
women. 






Aged and infirm Odd FeUows and 
their wives and widows. 


None 




Aged and indigent soldiers and their 


None 


Aged and infirm 


None 



Aged and infirm . 



Aged and infirm men 
Aged and infirm 



S250toS500. 
None - . 



All classes of incurables except insane, j None . 
Chronic aged and infirm ! None. 



Aged 

Disabled Union veterans 

Aged women 



. women . 



None. 
S.300. . . 
S300... 



Brooklyn Methodist Episcopal Church Home. 
Park place and New York avenue. 



Methodist Episcopal churches in the 
Borough of Brooklyn. 



Aged men and women SlOO 

Aged colored men and women ^ S150 

Aged men and couples j SlOO to $230 . 



Consiunptive men, women, and chU- j None. 

dren. 
Aged and Infirm members of the SlOO... 

Methodist Episcopal Church. I 



■ Part of New York city. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



245 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 




Amount of 

sidy fi-om 
public frmds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 






On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. ■ 


Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




Men. 


Women. 


ChUdren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children.' 


Men. 


AVomen. 


Children. 








4 


7 








3 





4 


10 





4 


$0 


.51,794 


$2,220 


399 


7 


« 


59 








58 


6 


8 


79 


1 


1,092 


296 


5,617 


400 


5 


26 








3 





4 


28 





7 





(') 


6,000 


401 


3 


15 














3 


15 





4 








2,606 


402 


31 


31 














29 


30 





6 





1,900 


10,000 


403 





20 








20 








21 





2 





2,424 


3,600 


404 


107 


116 





33 


9 





107 


117 














10,825 


405 





57 








(') 








(') 





10 





1,000 


9,274 


406 


4 


11 








3 





4 


13 





7 





400 


4,600 


407 


7 


8 





1 


2 





7 


9 





2 





1,000 


1,500 


408 


13 


36 





2 


9 





13 


36 














(') 


409 





21 

















21 





6 








4,143 


410 





13 


- .4 


1 


14 


4 


1 


13 


4 





360 


312 


1,000 


411 


70 


100 





67 


90 


13 


57 


90 


13 


10 





13,564 


16,648 


412 


■ 


37 





13 


12 


1 


48 


45 


' 


30 




1,&37 


31,560 


413 


" 


26 





11 


35 





11 


24 





5 





3,924 


5,939 


414 


» 


13 








2 








11 





5 








3,094 


415 


17 


2 





4 


1 





20 


3 





5 








3,800 


416 


47 


53 





g 


33 





55 


86 





13 




1,007 


16, 121 


417 


22 







23 







19 


27 










1,100 


7,129 


418 





37 








4 








36 





6 





30O 


6,516 


419 


40 








11 








43 








9 





2,162 


6,810 


420 


75 


SO 





17 


21 





75 


80 














'" 


421 


124 


73 





43 


50 





137 


70 





55 


. 


- 55,000 


45,000 


422 


15 


36 





15 


39 





27 


46 





1 





835 


4,945 


423 





s 








2 








s 





2 


260 


328 


1,298 


424 


1,928 








1,142 








2 033 








313 







224,052 


425 





15 








3 





' 


15 





4 








2,118 


426- 





9 

















9 





2 





300 


1,200 


427 


9 


51 





9 


51 





9 


51 





10 





SOO 


10,258 


428. 


5 


27 








5 





3 


29 





5 








4,-588 


429 


54 


16 





15 


4 





60 


14 





12 





3,400 


12,768 


430 


66 


25 


10 


■ 208 


93 


10 


65 


26 


11 


24 


14,189 





25,272 


431 


6 


42 








10 





6 


46 


° 


10 







11,039 


432 



246 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NEW YORK— Contiiiued. 

Brooklyn— Continued. 

Faith Home for Incurables 

546 Park place. 
German Evangelical Home for the Aged. 

Chaimcey street. 
Graham Home lor Old Ladies 

320 Washington avenue. 
Greenpoiut Home for the Aged 

Oak and Guernsey streets. 



Home for the Aged 

Eighth 
Home lor the Aged 

BushT^dck and De Kalb 



and Sixteenth street. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



Marienheim, The 

Eighteenth avenue and Sixty-fourth street. 
Scandinavian Old Ladies' Home 

1244 Sixty-seventh street. 
Wartburg Home lor the Aged and Infirm 

Fulton street. 
Buffalo: 

Church Charity Foundation Church Home 

24 Rhode Island street. 
EvangeUcal Church Home of Buffalo 

Broadway. 
Home lor the Friendless 

1500 Main street. 

Lutheran Church Home lor the Aged and Infirm ol j Association of the Lutheran Church..' 
Buffalo. i I 

Walden 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private corporation 

German Evangehcal Aid Society . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Special class cared for. 



Little Sisters of the Poor. 
Little Sisters ol the Poor. 



Id Fellows Home Association. 
Private corporation . 



Incurable women 

Aged and infirm men and 

Aged and iolirm women 

.4ged and infirm men and women. 

Men and women over 65 years 

Aged poor 

Aged poor 



Amomit ol 

entrance lee 

required. 



None 

.S25 to WOO. 

S200 

None 



Year 

when 

lound- 

ed. 



Protestant Episcopal Church . 



Private corporation. 



Men and women over 60 years 

Aged women , 

Aged and infirm men and women . 



Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm women . 
Aged men and women. . . 



None. 
None. 
None. 
•SoOO... 
None . 
S500... 



1851 
1879 



S200 

Not fixed. 

$2,50 

•?250 



1876 
185S 



Clark Manor House. 
CastOe: 



^ Christian Ministers' He 



Chiton, Staten Island: < 

Mariners' FamOy Asylum 



Cohoes : 

Home lor Aged Women 

100 Vliet street. 
Doyle: 

Sacred Heart ol Mary Asylum. 
East Aurora: 

Havens Home lor the Aged 



Elmira: 

Home lor the Aged 

Central avenue. 
Fredonia: 

Home lor Aged Women. 
Garden vihe : 

St. Francis Home 



Gerry Orphanage and Home 

Glens Falls: 

Glens FaUs Home. 

Hawthorne: 

Rosary Hill Home 

Homer: 

Cortland Coimty Home lor Aged Women. 
Hudson: 

Home lor the Aged 

Volunteer Firemen's Home 



Ithaca: 

Home, The 

514 South Aur 



Sisters of St. Francis I Aged and infirm men and women. 



Private corporation. 
Private association . . 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Fehcian Sisters of St. Francis. 



Aged men and women . 



None. 



Aged wives, widows, 
daughters of : 



3ters, or S125. 
8200. 



Aged persons and orphans j Not fixed . 

! 

Men and women over 70 years i .?100 



1895 
1902 



Evangelical Association 

Private corporation 

Woman's Christian Association. 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Protestant churches of Geneva.. 

Free Methodist Church 

Private corporation 

Dominican Sisters 

Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Firemen's Association of the State of 
New York. 

Ladies' Union Benevolent Society . . . 



Aged men and women S300 

Men and women over 60 years 8300 to S50( 

Age', women i $300 

Aged men and women | None 

Aged women I Not fixed . 

Aged men and women, and orphans. . j $500 

Aged women I S200 

Persons ^vith incurable cancer i None 

None 



Aged and infii-m women. 

Aged women 

Aged and infirm firemen. 



Aged i 



infirm women . 



$300toS500. 
None 



Society of St. .lohnland 

2 includes St. Francis Home, Gardenville, and St. Francis Home lor the .'Vged, Williamsville. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 247 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Men Women. | Childr 



43 





160 





13.5 





6 





27 





10 






Admitted during 1904. 

Women. Children. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. I Children. 



Number 

of paid 

employees 



Amount of i Income i ^^^. „„„^ 

annual sub- ' from pay : L°^}^.f 

sidy from I inmates, 1^™%, 

public funds. 1903. : nance, 1903. 



«0 

12,500 

1,000 

675 



' Males, S150; females, SIOO. 



I Part of New York city. 



'Included in St. Francis Asylum, Buffalo. 



19, 000 434 



4,163 
2,993 



4,960 
5,000 
2,135 



5,886 


449 


900 


450 


6,523 


451 


784 


452 


3,026 


453 


3,810 


454 


1,913 


455 


2,525 


456 



3,000 
5,000 



248 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintairied by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 
Lookport: 

Odd Fellows' Home 

Middletown: 

Orange County Home for Aged Women 

41 South street. 
Mohawk: 

Old Ladies' Home 

Mt. Vernon: 

Martha Wilson Home 

Mary Louise Heins Home 

New Brighton: ^ 

Sailors' Snug Harbor 

New York: ^ 

Baptist Home 

116 East Sixty-eighth street. 
Baptist Ministers' Home 

(West Farms.) 

Chapiu Home for the Aged and Infirm 

151 East Sixty-sixth street. 
German Odd Fellows' Home 

(Uniouport.) 
Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews 

One hundred and fifth street and Colum- 
bus avenue. 
Home for Aged Indigent Females 

891 Amsterdam avenue. - 
Home for Aged Women , 

41 'West Twentieth street. 
Home for Incurables 

One hundred and eightieth street and 
Third avenue. 
Home for Old Men and Aged Couples 

One hundred and twelfth street and Am- 
sterdam avenue. 
Home for the Aged 

213 East Seventieth street. 
Home for the Aged 

135 West One hundred and sixth street. 
Home of the Daughters of Jacob 

302-303 East Broadway. 
House of Calvary 

5-7 Perry street. 
House of Rest for Consumptives 

(Inwood-on-the-Hudson.) 
House of the Holy Comforter 

One hundred and thirty-ninth street and 
Riverside drive. 
Isabella Heimath 

One hundred and ninetieth street and Am- 
sterdam avenue. 
Mary Fisher Home 

24.50 Grand avenue. 
Methodist Episcopal Church Home 

673 Amsterdam avenue. 
Peabody Home for Aged and Indigent AVomen... 

2064 Boston avenue. 
Presbyterian Home for Aged Women 

49 East Seventy-third street. 
St. Joseph's Home tor the Aged 

209 West Fifteenth street. 
St. Luke's Home for Aged Women 

2914 Broadway. 
St. PhUip's Parish Home 

1119 Boston road. 
St. Rose's Free Home 

426 Cherry street. 
Samaritan Home for the Aged 

414 West Twenty-second street. 
Trinity Chapel Home 

221 West Twenty-fom-th street. 
Webb's Academy and Home for Shipbuilders 

One hundred and eighty-eighth street and 
Sedgwick, avenue. 
Norwich: 

Chenango VaUey Home 

Ogdensburg: 

Ogdensburg Home and Orphanage 

47 King street. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



Private association 

Evangelical Lutheran Church . 



Tew York. 
Private corporation. 



Private corporation . 



Private association 

Church of the Holy Communion. 
Private corporation 



Protestant Episcopal Church . 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

Women of Calvary 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church . 

Private corporation 



Private association 

Methodist Episcopal Church . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity 



fork. 
St. Philip's Episcopal Church 

Dominican Sisters 

Private coi-poration 

Protestant Episcopal Trinity Chapel 

Webb en- 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Charity (Grey Nuns) . 



Aged and infirm women 
Aged men and women . . . 



Aged, decrepit, and ^ 



S500... 

-out sailors . None . 



Aged, disabled, or infirm Baptist SIOO. 

ministers and their wives and 

widows. 
Aged and infirm men and 



Aged women 

Aged and helpless women . . 
Incurable men and women . 

Aged men and 



Aged poor 

Aged poor 

Aged and infirm Hebrew men and 
women. 

Destitute women with incurable can- 
cer. 

Incurable consumptives 

Incurable women and female children. 



and convalescents . 



Aged men and women of the Meth- 
odist Episcopal Church. 
Aged and infirm women 



Aged and Infirm women . 



Aged and mdigent 



Aged, infirm, and destitute colored 

men and women. 
Women with incurable cancer 



Aged and unfortunate men and wo- 
men. 
Aged and infirm women 



Aged women or couples 



2 Part of New York city. 



Aged Odd Fellows and their wives, None. 

widows, and orphans. 
Aged and infirm men and women ' None . 



.$200 

Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 

S300 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 

None. 



$300 toS500. 

None 

None. : 

None 

$800 to S5,00C 



$150... 
None. 
$2.50... 
S225... 
None. 

$300... 
None. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



249 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 


' 






























Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
aimual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

Inmates, 

1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


- Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 








21 


8 





3 


1 





23 


6 





8 


$0 


SO 


S6,213 


468 





27 








3 





I 


■ (.) 





5 








3,552 


469 





12 








1 








12 





3 








1,500 


470 





8 








2 








- 
9 





3 








1,857 


471 


■8 


10 





(') 


(') 





(') 


Q) 





4 





0) 


2,194 


472 


913 








115 








907 








431 








280, 810 


473 


4 


76 





(') 


(■) 





0) 


(') 





o 


° 


(1) 


(') 


474 





7 








1 


0. 










1 








7,124 


475 


8 


55 





3 


5 





11 


52 





15 





3,900 


15, 128 


476 


48 


28 


94 


8 


8 


24 


46 


26 


101 


13 


3,367 


1,064 


16, 758 


477 


119 


110 





35 


25 





120 


113 





28 








«,« 


478 





92 








7 








92 





26 





1,200 


36, 880 


479 





23 








2 








18 










1,630 


6,190 


480 


120 


152 





39 


36 





121 


154 


0. 


120 





63,595 


123,314 


481 


39 


21 





« 


3 





39 


21 





21 





2,700 


22,000 


482 


115 


158 





42 


46 





116 


159 














10, 645 




128 


178 





31 


43 





127 


180 














(') 


484 


17 


16 


. 


4 


1 





17 


16 





10 








4,000 


485 





• 25 








28 








11 





13 


4,707 





7,943 


486 


15 


9 





41 


26 





21 


14 













21,080 


487 





38 








5 








38 





14 








12,461 


488 


83 


85 





239 


200 





82 


80 





19 








27,785 


489 


5 


"l7 





5 


17 





4 


4 





5 





3,4.55 


6,177 


490 


10 


90 





1 


3 





8 


91 





20 








18,99.5 


491 





31 








4 








31 





9 


2,180 


o' 


7,189 


492 





45 








1 








45 





17 





5,126 


16,990 


493 


13 


253 





3 


29 





14 


248 





36 





33,440 


40,954 


494 





86 








3 








83 





28 





900 


27,881 


495 


0- 


14 








2 








12 





4 





300 


1,200 


496 





9 








26 








9 














2,000 


497 


13 


18 





8 








15 


18 





6 





2,000 


8,857 


498 













5 








10 





4 








2,797 


499 


25 


15 







3 





31 


17 





28 








35,000 


500 


1 


11 








2 





1 


11 





3 





600 


1,200 


.501 


20 


40 


151 


14 


17 


(6 


23 


39 


14.5 


7 


6,075 


5,043 


16,.391 


502 



'Includes Manhattan and Bronx boroughs o.ily: for data for other boroughs see Brooklyn, CUfton, New Brighton, and West New Brighton. 



250 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



NEW YORK— Continued. 
Oneida: 

Old Ladies' Home of Madison County 

Ossining: 

Bethany Home 

87 Broadway. 
Oswego: 

Home for the Homeless 

Third and East Utica streets. 
Oxford; 

New York State Woman's Relief Coi-ps Home. . 

Plattsburg: 

Samuel F. VUas Home 

Poughkeepsie: 

Old Ladies' Home 

Prjngle Memorial Home 

153 Academy street. 

Vassar Brothers' Home 

Rliinebeck: 

Thompson House 

Rochester: 

German Home for the Aged 

1262 South avenue. 

Protestant Episcopal Church Home 

509 Mt. Hope avenue. 

Rochester Home for the Friendless 

210 East avenue. 

St. Aim's Home for the Aged 

876 East Mam street. 
Schenectady: 

Home lor the Friendless 

237 Green street. 
Seneca Falls: 

Johnson Home 

Sonyea: 

Craig Colony for EpHeptios 

-Syracuse: 

Syracuse Home for Aged Women 

212 Townsend street. 
Tappan: 

German Masonic Home 

Troy: 

Deborah Powers' Home for Old Ladies 

Third avenue and Twenty-third street. 
Episcopal Chm-oh Home 

Seventh avenue and Broadway. 
Home for the Aged ■ 

Ninth avenue and Hoosick street. 
Presbyterian Home 

90 Fourth street. 
Utica: 

Home for Aged Men and Couples 

525 Sunset avenue. 
Home for the Homeless 

32 Faxton street. 
Masonic Home and School 

St. Elizabeth's Home 

172 Columbia street. 

St. Luke's Home 

Columbia street. 
Verbank: 

AU Saints Home and St. Paul's Training School 

Waterford: 

BresUn Home 

Watertown: 

Henry Keep Home 

West New Brighton:" 

Actors' Fund Home 

WUhamsville: 

St. Francis Home for the Aged 

Yonkers: 

Home for Aged and Infirm 

Riverdale avenue. 

St. John's Home for Aged Women , 

5 Hudson street. 

1 Not reported. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Stateof New York.. 



Protestant churches of Poughkeepsie 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Trustees of Thompson fund 

St. John's Charitable Association . 
Episcopal churches of Rochester . . 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



Special class cared for. 



Private corporation. 



State of New York. 
Private association . 



German Masonic Temple Association 
of the ninth Masonic district of 
New York. 



Private coi'poration 

Episcopal churches of Troy. N. Y , 

■Little Sisters of the Poor 

Presbyterian churches of Troy . . . 



Private corporation 

Protestant churches of Utica 



Episcopal churches of Utica 

Brothers of Nazareth 

Ti-ustees of Thomas Breslin endow- 



Trustees of the Henry Keep estate 

Private coi-poration 

Sisters of St. Francis 

Independent Order of B'nai B'litl 

St. John's Episcopal Church 

-For adults 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

requii-ed. 



Destitute and homeless women over ] S200.. 
60 years. 

Aged and infirm women, I None . 

Aged and infirm women i S300-. 



army niu-ses. 
Aged and infirm i 



Aged and destitute women . 
Aged and indigent men . . : . 



¥200. 
S300. 



SlOO to S250. 



Aged and Infirm men 

1 
Aged and disabled women I None 

Aged men and women S300 

Women over 60 years, and children. . . . S250 2 

Homeless women 5150 to $250. 

Aged and infirm women ; None 



Aged, infirm, or needy women I SlOO 

Indigent females I None 

Epileptics ' None 

Aged and indigent females • None 

i 

Aged and infinn Masons and their i None 

dependents. ; 

Aged women ' .$200 to S.SOO . 

Aged women SlOO 

Aged poor I None 

nen SlOO 



Old and infii'm men , and couples 1 S250 

Women over 60 years ; I S200 

I 

Needy Masons and their wives, wid- ' None 

ows. and oi-phans. 
Aged men and women Not fixed . 

Aged women None 

Aged and convalescent men, and des- Not fixed . 
titute boys. 

Indigent women .^200 



.A.ged men and women 

Aged actors and actresses None . 

Aged and infirm men and women. . . . None . 

Aged and infirm members of the 1 None. 

B'nai B'rith and their wives. 
Aged and infirm women S300. . . 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



1895 
1872 
1897 

18-S8 ! 
1870 i 



18fi0 
1873 
1870 



1902 
1902 



' Included in St. EUzabeth's Hospital. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 251 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



1 






NUM 


BER OF INMATES. 




































Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 

pubUcfimds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




I On January 1, 


904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


ChUdren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 







13 








5 








15 





4 


SO 


$0 


S2,400 


.503 





5 








1 








6 





■ 3 








1,000 


504 





20 

















19 





4 





(1) 


2,800 


505 


40 


105 





20 


54 





39 


]]2 





27 







26,350 


506 





13 








2 








15 





5' 





(1) 


2,800 


507 





31 








2 








31 





6 








5,810 


508 


8 








^ 








5 








5 





600 


7,3.50 


509 


9 








2 








9 





° 


4 





(') 


4,308 


510 





4 








(') 







m 





6 





(1) 


« 


511 


13 


25 





6 


8 





13 


25 





2 





3,365 


2,. 500 


512 





22 







3 


50 


° 


23 


48 




1,148 


1,833 


7,103 513 





54 








11 








52 







314 


1,483 


10,000 514 





90 


- 





18 








89 







3,646 


•5,785 


9,.575 


515 





11 








3 








11 










370 


2,200 


™ 





19 








1 








19 













8,100 


517 


47.1 


352 





70 


71 





545 


423 





142 







128,150 


518 





48 
















48 







1,500 


3,552 


8,627 


519 


12 







16 


10 





16 


10 













4,500 


520 













1 








1] 










400 


1,846 


521 













2 








9 


° 










3,000 


522 


74 


103 





28 


26 





75 


100 













6,976 


523 





14 

















13 













3,277 


524 


36 


' 16 





8 


2 





36 


17 










250 


3,631 


525 





60 








7 








54 










1,492 


7, 155 526 


153 


91 


56 


25 


12 


12 


156 


89 


63 










57,000 


527 


2 


16 








5 





2 


14 







(■*) 


(') 


e) 


528 





9 








0) 








m 










1,037 


(") 


529 


75 





n 


m 





(') 


(1) 





0) 







3,023 


10,892 


530 





3 








2 








8 





2 





400 


1,600 


,531 


2 


35 








2 





2 







10 





300 


7,941 


532 


i 18 

j 


9 





5 


3 





18 


10 





12 








9,400 


533 


24 


6 





23 


4 





j 22 


8 








(') 


(') 


(') 


534 


fi3 


34 





8 


8 





58 


35 





18 








16,500 


535 





' 














» 


7 


° 


I 


o' 





1,400 


536 



252 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

requii'ed. 



NORTH CAROLINA. 
Raleigh: 

North Carolina Soldiers' Home 

St. Luke's Home 

Salem: 

Salem Home 

S23 South Main street. 
Wilmington: 

Catherine Kennedy Home 

Princess and Ninth streets. 

NORTH DAKOTA. 
Lisbon: 

Soldiers' Home of North Dakota 

OHIO. 
Canton: 

Aultmau Home lor Aged Women 

Cincinnati : 

Aged Germans' Home 

Burnet and Altenheim avenues. 
Bodmann German Widows' Home 

(Mt. Auburn.) 
Crawford Old Men's Home... 

(College HUl.) 
Home for Incurables 

(East Walnut Hills.) 
Home for the Aged 

(Montgomery road.) 
Home for the Aged 

(Clifton Heights.) 
Home for the Jewish Aged and Infirm 

(Avondale.) 
Methodist Home for the Aged 

(College Hill.) 
Wesley Home 

464 Pioneer street. 
Widows and Old Men's Home 

(Walnut HiUs.) 
Cireleville: 

Circleville Home and Hospital 

Cleveland: 

Aged Germans' Home 

1147 Detroit street. 
Church Home, The 

563 Prospect street. 
Cleveland Home for Aged Colored People 

186 Osborn street. 
Eliza .Jennings Home 

1783 Detroit street. 
Home for Aged Women 

194 Kennard street. 
Sir Moses Monteflore Home 

Columbus: 

Aged Germans' Home 

Hannah Neil Home for the Friendless 

727 East Main street. 

Home for the Aged 

1776 East Broad street. 
Dayton: 

Home for Widows and Destitute Women 

May and Findlay streets. 
National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers 

Delaware: 

Home for the Aged 

William and Union streets. 
Elyria: 

Old Ladies' Home 

Second street and West avenue. 
Fostoria: 

German Baptist Home 

Greenville: 

Brethren's Home 

Lodi: 

Home for Aged Women 

Madison : 

Home of Ohio Soldiers, Sailors, and Marines — 

1 Not reported. 



State of North Carolina. 



Private association 

Ladies' Benevolent Society. 



State of North Dakota. 



Aultmar 
Altenheim Verein of Cincinnati 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Society for the Care of Incurables 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Wesley Chapel Ladies' Aid Society... 

Private corporation 

Private corporation^. 

Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Ohio. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation . 



Protestant churches of Columbus. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Woman's Christian Association. 

United States Government 

Private corporation 

Private association 



German Baptist Brethren Church . 

Private corporation 

State of Ohio 



Aged and infirm Confederate soldiers 
Aged, infirm, and blind women 



Aged and infirm women, and children , 
Destitute women over 50 years 



Women over 65 years 



Infirm men over 60 years 

Widows of German citizens 

Aged and infirm colored men 

Incurables of Hamilton county . . . 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm Jews 

Aged and infirm persons, and de 



Aged and destitute women over 

years. 
Aged and indigent 



Aged and infirm 

Aged and infirm 

Sick and friendless 

Aged and infirm 

Incurable homeless women 
Women 65 years and over. 
Aged and iuflrm Israelites. 



Aged and infirm 

Needy women of all ages, and cliildren 



Aged and mfirm 

Homeless women over 60 years. 



Disabled soldiers honorably dis- 
charged. 



Aged homeless ■ 

Aged women 60 years and over. . . 

Aged and infirm 

Aged, infirm, crippled, and bUnd. 



Aged women . 



Ohio soldiers, sailors, and mar 
and their dependent relatives. 

! Opened December 26, 1903. 



None 

None 

None 

8100 

None 

$300 

$300 

$250 

$100 

.8300 

None 

None 

None.- 

$300 to $3,000. 

None 

$300 

Not fixed 

$150 to $300.. 

None 

$200 

$300 

$250 

None 

$250.: 

None 

$300 to $600.. 

$100 

None 

$200 to $300.. 

$300 to $500.. 

None 

None 

$300 

None 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



253 









NTJMBEE OF INMATES. 


































Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
pubUc funds. 


Income 

from pay 

mmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On 


January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 




128 








24 








129 








13 




SO 


S14,000 
1,000 


537 





9 








2 








9 





2 


SO 


468 


538 





13 


1 


1 


2 





1 


13 





1 


100 





700 


539 


, 


10 

















10 





2 





(1) 


850 


540 


30 







19 


3 





36 


6 





10 







8,978 


541 





3 








11 


. 





10 





4 





(2) 


(.). 


542 


34 








8 





° 


39 








9 










543 





43 








4 


» 





44 





6 


3,000 


1,800 


6,241 


544 


^ 








2 





« 


7 








2 





100 


1,000 


545 


10 


15 





12 


15 





11 


14 





8 








2,907 


546 


102 


98 


■ 


34 


36 





102 


94 














(1) 


547 


75 


86 





37 


18 





85 


80 











50 


6,488 


548 


25 


15 





• 8 


1 





27 


12 





8 








10,071 


549 




19 





2 


4 





3 


22 





7 





1,358 


4,894 


550 





4 

















4 





1 








600 


551 


37 


'• 





6 


8 





34 


81 





21 








20,027 


552 


1 


9 





1 


4 





1 


11 





4 





975 


1,218 


553 


20 


12 





4 


2 





20 


12 





4 








3,216 


554 





19 








4 








18 





7 








3,355 


555 


2 


9 





u 








1 


6 





1 





380 


1,500 


556 





28 








2 








26 





8 








4,500 


557 





37 








5 





c 


37 





8 





1,000 


7,000 


558 


28 


22 





2 


1 





26 


21 





12 








11, 700 


559 





14 








1 








11 





3 





450 


802 


560 








19 





20 


180 





20 


180 


4 





276 


1,888 


561 


4 


34 














4 


34 





7 





400 


4,575 


562 





26 

















26 





5 





100 


3,614 


563 






14 










4 






5,645 




14 






1,200 





622 


648, 140 


564 


208 


565 





12 








12 








12 





4 





312 


2,336 


566 


(5) 


m 


e) 


5 


6 





5 


6 





2 





m 


P) 


567 


12 


16 





2 


4 





14 


16 





6 





(■*) 


(1) 


568 





7 

















fi 





2 








1,775 


569 


1 


38 

















33 





13 




668 


9,002 


570 







' Opened June 26. 1904. 



' Opened July, 1903. 



254 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERi\L\NENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by — 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

requii'ed. 



State of Ohio . 



Daughters of .Terusalem 

Masonic fraternity of Ohio. 



Sisters of St. Francis . 



Little Sisters of the Poor. 
Private corporation 



Sisters of Mercy ' As 



Private association. 
State of Oregon 



OHIO— Continued. I 

Marietta : [ 

Washington County Woman's Home \ Private corporation. 

812 Third street. 
Portsmouth: 

Home for Aged Women I Erivate corporation. 

Rittman : j 

Mennonite Old People's Home i Mennonite Church... 

Salem : 

Home for Aged Women Private corporation . 

McKinley avenue and Washington street 
Sandusky: 

Ohio" Soldiers and Sailors' Home 

Springfield: 

Clark Memorial Home for Aged Women 

256 North Limestone street. 

Daughters of Jerusalem Home 

■Ohio Masonic Home 

(National road.) 
Ohio Odd Fellows' Home 

Tiffin: 

St. Francis Home 

90 Melmore street. 
Toledo: 

Home for the Aged 

1616 Starr avenue. 

Old Ladies' Home 

CoUlngwood and Central avenues. 

OREGON. 
Portland: 

Mount St. Joseph's Home for the Aged 

(Sunnyside.) 

Odd Fellows' Home 

East Thirty-second and Holgate streets. 

Patten Home 

975 Michigan avenue. 
Roseburg: 

Soldiers' Home 

PENNSYLVANIA. 
Allegheny: 

Home for Aged People 

Lafayette avenue. 

Home for the Aged 

501 Washington street. 
Ambler: 

John C. Mercer Home 

Ben Avon: 

Odd Fellows' Home 

BrookvLlle: 

Pennsylvania Memorial Home 

Cheltenham: 

Improved Order of Red Men's Home 

Easton: 

Home for Aged and Infirm Women 

1032 Northampton street. 
Erie: i 

Erie Home for the Friendless 

Twenty-second and Sassafras street 
Pennsylvania Soldiers and Sailors' Home. . 

St. Mary's Home 

Ash and Twenty-sixth streets. 
Falroaks: 

German Protestant Home for the Aged 

Frederick: 

Mennonite Home 

Grove City: 

Wayside Iim • 

Harrisburg: 

Home for the Friendless 

1.1.36 Derry street. 

Messiah Rescue and Benevolent Home 

1185 Bailey street. 
Hatboro: 

Orange Home 

1 Not reported. 



Aged and infirm women ; .S150 to $300. 

Aged and homeless women I S300 

Aged and infirm ! None 

Aged and infirm women ' S300 



Disabled soldiers and sailors . 
over 60 years . . 



None. 
S200... 



Aged and infirm men and women . . . 
Indigent Masons and their families . 



Aged men and women, and orphans. 

Aged poor 

Aged and uifirm women 



Not fixed . 
None 



Not fixed. 
Not fixed . 

None 

$300 



. and women . 



Aged men and 

Aged, infirm, and destitute soldiers . 



jittle Sisters of the Poor. 



Woman's Relief Corps Aged and infirm . 



Improved Order of Red Men of Penn- Indigent members of the order, 
sylvania. 

Private corporation Aged and infirm women 

Private corporation 

State of Pennsylvania 

Sisters of St. Joseph 



(1) 



Private association. 
Private corporation . 



Aged women, and children 

3d. and infirm soldiers of 



the Civil War 
Aged men and 



.\ged men and women 

.Aged, infirm, and homeless. 



. and homeless men and women. 



Aged and infirm Orangemen and their 
wives and widows, and Protestant 
orphans. 



Not fixed . 

None 

None 



None. 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 



None . 
None. 



$400 

Not fixed. 



SIOO. 
S50.. 



i Entrance fee of $.500 for aged wome 



PERMANENT HOMES F(3R ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 255 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Men. j Women. Children. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 



Number 

of paid 

employees. 



Women, i Children. 



W^omen. Children. 



Amoimt of Income 



annual sub- . from pay ^i m-Aintp- 
sidy from ! inmates, ■ „° „„„ ioa-, 
public funds. 



(1) ! si,c 



23, 278 



(1) 

3, 



4.750 
1,417 



4,924 


1 


1,746 


584 


2,2.50 


585 


16,376 


586 


1,827 
(1) 


587 

588 || 


2,700 


589 


„„.» 1 




591 


2,661 


592 



256 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOLIES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 



Kennett Square: 

Friends' Boarding Home. 
State street. 



Lebanon: 

Home for Widows and Single Women. 
North Tenth street. 



St. John's Lutheran Home. 



Newcastle: 

Almira Home for Aged Women 

Newtown: 

Friends' Boarding Home 

Norristown: 

Abington Friends' Home 

Swede and Powell streets. 

Aged Woman's Home of Montgomery County. 



Oakboume: 

Pennsylvania Epileptic Hospital and Colony Farm 
Philadelphia: 

Aged Woman's 



1929 South Broad street. 



Ed'tt'in Forrest Home 

(Holmesburg.) 

E vangeUcal Home for the Aged 

Old York Road and Hunting Park 



Hayes Mechanics Home, The 

Belmont avenue (Bala station). 
Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons. 

4400 Girard avenue. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Friends of the Western Quarterly 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



German Baptist Brethren Church. . 

E vangehcal Lutheran Church 

German Baptist Brethren Church . 



United Brethren in Christ. 



Private corporation 

Bucks Quarterly Meeting 

Abington Quarterly Meeting. . . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Baptist Church 

Christ and St. Peter's churches. 

Trustees of the Edmn 

dowment- 
German Home Society. 



German Baptist Hor 

Society. 
Private corporation . 



Home for Aged Veterans 

Sixty-fifth and Vine streets. 



Special class cared for. 



Aged and infirm Friends . 

Aged and infirm 
Aged women 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Aged, helpless, and homeless men and : 
women. 

Aged and infirm men and women, and 
children. 1 

Aged men and women 



Not fixed. 
8250 



None. 
S200... 



Aged women 

Aged and infirm men and women . 
Aged and infirm men and women . 



Not fixed . 

None 

S150 



Epileptics 

Aged and infirm 



Baptist widows and single women 

over 65 years. 
Aged ladies of the Episcopal Church . . 

Aged and infirm actors and actresses. . 

Aged and infirm men and women over 
65 years. 



Infirm men and women over 60 years. 
Mechanics over 65 years 



Infirm colored men and women over 

60 years. 
Aged and indigent wliite couples 60 

years and over. 
Aged and infirm veterans and their 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Ladies of the G . A. R . of Pennsylvania 

Private corporation 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor I Aged and infirm poor 

Little Sisters of the Poor I Aged and infirm poor 



None 

None 

S200to$250.. 

None 

None 

Not fixed... 

SlOO 

$200 to $300. 
S150to$500. 
S200 



Men and ' 

Aged and infirm poor. 



: of Rest for the Aged 

.5919 Wayne avenue (Germantown). 



Leamy Home 

(Mt. Airy.) 
Lucian Moss Home for Incurables. 



Private corporation .\ged and infirm wMte women over 

65 5'ears. 
Private corporation .\ged and homeless men, women, and 

I children. 
Trustees of Leamy endo-svment i Aged and indigent gentlewomen of 

', the Protestant Episcopal Church. 



Lutheran Orphans' Home and Asylum for the 
Aged and Infirm. 

6950 Germantown avenue. 
Mary J. Drexel Home 

2100 College avenue. 



Pennsylvania Lutheran Synod Aged and infirm Lutherans, and des- 
titute orphans. 



None 

S250toS500. 

None 

None 

None 

S300. 

SlOO to $200. 

None 

None 

None 

S110» 



Private corporation 

Masonic Grand Lodge of Pennsylvs 

nia. 
Church of the Messiah 



German Protestants 60 years and c 

-•Vged and infirm Masons 

Aged men and women 



S300 

SlOO to 8500. 



Year 
when 
found- 



- Included in Jewish Hospital. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



257 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 




Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

mjQates, 

1903. 






On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 


Number 

ol paid 

employees. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




Men. 


Women. 


CMldren. 


Men. 


Women. 


CHldren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 








1 


13 





1 


3 





2 


16 





5 


SO 


$2,022 


S2,800 


603 





10 








1 








11 





4 





170 


1,700 


604 





« 








.2 


■ 





2 





4 


1,000 





1,587 


605 


n 


18 





2 


7 





12 


17 





11 


Q) 


3,300 


2,400 


606 


8 


9 


6 


4 


8 





10 


11 


6 


4 





1,624 


1,817 


607 


6 


7 





4 


4 





, 3 


4 





3 





199 


1,351 


608 


3 


3 








1 





3 


3 





1 








425 


609 





19 








2 








16 





5 


2,500 


1,425 


4,285 


610 


6 


15 





1 


3 





3 


15 





5 





3,402 


5,200 


611 


5 


14, 





2 


4 





5 


14 





4 





2,184 


4,223 


612 





6 

















5 





6 








2,484 


613 


25 


27 





5 


4 





25 


26 





15 


4,000 


3,166 


14, 150 


614 





13 








5 








12 





1 





674 


1,039 


615 





80 








7 








79 





12 





1,050 


11,400 


616 





54 








7 








52 





18 








18,872 


617 


3 


8 














3 


5 





8 








9,547 


618 


12 


19 





1 


3 





13 


17 





4 


1,000 


1,500 


5,304 


619 


24 


10 





1 


2 





23 


12 





11 








1, 400 


620 


6 


9 





1 


2 





6 


10 





2 


126 


200 


2,264 


621 


66 








9 








63 








10 


1,500 





15,600 


622 


.SI 


109 





3 


15 





30 


106 





35 





3,250 


20,491 


623 


13 


16 





1 


1 





11 


13 





7 








7,098 


624 


15 


16 





13 


18 





17 


28 





4 


3,500 


1,892 


5,818 


625 


2 


23 








1 





1 


24 





4 


2,000 


300 


3,517 


626 


140 


152 





36 


44 





140 


152 














m 


627 


120 


130 





41 


41 





120 


130 











250 


9,358 


628 


13 


33 





7 


9 





13 


33 














2,055 


629 





10 








2 








10 





3 








2,289 


630 





107 








10 








107 





21 





1,150 


17, 493 


631 


30 


20 





733 


341 


1,052 


70 


12 


18 


5 








3,848 


632 





24 








8 








32 





13 








13,000 


633 


15 


8 





W 


(') 





G) 


(') 





13 





(») 


{') 


634 


12 


30 


102 


2 


2 


16 


14 


32 


118 


17 





1,700 


8,000 


635 


13 


28 





1 








14 


26 





2 





1,200 


8,900 


636 


67 








25 








75 








13 





1,300 


12, 629 


637 





7 











' 





7 





3 





100 


1,863 


638 



For aged persons. 



258 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 





NAME AND MCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Special class oared for. 

- ^ 


Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 


Year 

when 

found- 1 

ed. 




PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 
PWIadelphia— Continued. 




Aged and infirm men and women 

Aged and infirm men and women .... 

Odd Fellows over 60 years 

Women 65 years and over 


S.300toS500 

$300 


1865 

1888 
1874 
1875 
1864 

1890 

1877 
1897 

1885 

1872 
1899 

1886 
1849 
1857 
1889 
1875 
1811 

1859 
1882 
(2) 

1883 
1875 
1895 
1897 
1899 
1892 

1879 
1882 

1872 


640 
641 
642 


Belmont and Edgley avenues (West Phila- 
delplila). 




2030-2032 Columbia avenue. 


Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Peimsylvania. 




Seventeenth and Tioga streets. 
Old Ladies' Home ol Philadelphia- 


$250 to $450 

$150 to $500 


643 
644 

645 

646 
647 

648 

649 
650 

651 
652 
653 
654 
655 
656 

657 
658 
659 
660, 

661 
662 
663 
664 
665 
666 
667 


(Wissinomlng.) 
Old Man's Home 




Men over 60 years 

Aged and indigent widows and single 

Men and women 65 years and over. . . 
Incurable men. women, and children. 


Thirty-ninth and Baring streets. 
Pennsylvania Asylum for Indigent Widows and 
Single Women. 

Belgrade street and East Susquehanna 
avenue. 
Philadelphia German Protestant Home for the 
Aged. 

(Lawndale.) . 
Philadelpliia Home for Incurables 










$100 


4800 Woodland avenue. 
Philadelphia Quarterly Meetings' Boarding Home 
Green street and Washington Lane (Ger- 
mantown) . 
Presbyterian Home for Aged Couples and Aged 
Men. 

(Bala station.) 
Presbyterian Home for Widows and Single Women 
" Fifty-eighth street and Greenway avenue. 


Society of Friends (Philadelphia 
Quarterly Meeting) . 

Presbyterian Church of Pennsylvania 
Presbyterian Church 




Aged infirm men and couples 

Aged and infirm women 

Wives and widows of Odd Fellows 65 
years and over, and dependent Re- 
bekahs. 

Aged women 

Aged and infirm women 

Women 64 years and over 

Infirm women 65 years and over 

Women 65 years and over free from 

infirmities. 
Aged and disabled oflicers, seamen, 

and marines. 

Women over 60 years, and children. . . 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and infirm poor 

Old and infirm mothers, wives, sis- 
ters, widows, and daughters of vet- 
erans of the Civil War. 

Incurable men and women 

Widows and smgle women over 50 
years. 

Epileptic men, women, and children. . 

[ 
Incurable men and women 

Aged and homeless women, not incirr- 
able. 


(.) 

S200toS:300 

$200 




3760 North Fifteenth street. 






East Leverington avenue (Roxborough). 
St Ann's Widows' Asylum 




SI 000 


212-214 North FrankUn street. 






1315 Pine street. 

St. Mark's Home for Aged and Inflrm Women 

1428 Lombard street. 








$.500 


Forty-eighth street and Lancaster avenue. 




None 


Twenty-fourth street and Gray's Ferry 
road. 
Pittsburg: 


Episcopal churches of Allegheny 
county- 


$200 


Penn avenue and Fortieth street. 
Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Women 

Lemington avenue. 
Home of the Little Sisters of the Poor 




Little Sisters of the Poor 


None 


Penn avenue and Relieoca street. 
Ladies of the G. A. R. Home 


Ladies of the G. A. R., Department 
of Pennsylvania. 


None 


(Hawkins station.) 




Butler and Fifty-fifth streets. 
Reading: 

Home for Widows and Single Women of Reading. . . 

Rochester: 

Passavant Memorial Homes for Epileptics 

Upland: 




$200 to $250 


Institution of Protestant Deacon- 
esses of Allegheny county. 

Trustees of the J. Lewis Crozer en- 
dowment. 




West Chester: 




112 South Church street. 
Wilkesbarre: 

Home for Homeless Women 




$200 to $400 

(>) 
(^) 
$100 


450 Carey avenue. 
WUkinsl)urg: 


United Presbyterian Woman's Asso- 
ciation. 




Penn and Trenton avenues. 
Home for Aged Protestants 

Williamsport: 

Aged Colored Women's Home 


Aged Protestant men and women of 
Pittsburg. 

Aged colored women 

Aged and indigent women, and chil- 


669 
670 




124 Brandon street. 


Private corporation 


$300 







1 Men, $300; couples, $500. 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 259 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Number 

of paid 

employees 



Amount of Income 



sidy from i inmates, 
pubUc funds. 



* Single, .S250; couples, S500. 



820, 742 639 

4,47.5 ' 640 

12,260 j 641 

16,229 j 642 



10,870 


44,291 


646 


5,000 


8,400 


647 


2,700 


1.3,413 


648 


2,536 


31, .557 


649 



5,910 


651 


4,501 


652 


2,198 


653 


l,.3O0 


654 


4,572 


655 


70,325 


656 


13,000 


657 


6,121 


658 


(') 


659 



14,468 
2,752 



260 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERIVIANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Amovmt of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 
when 
found- 



RHODE ISLAND. 
Bristol: 

Home for Aged Women 

7 Franklin street. 

Rhode Island Soldiers' Home 

Pawtucket: 

Home for the Aged 

964 Main street. 
Providence: 

Home for Aged Coloi'ed Women 

45 East Transit street. 

Home for Aged Men 

Broad street. 

Home for Aged Women 

St. EUzabeth's Home 

183 Atlantic avenue. 
Woonsocket: 

Ballon Home for the Aged 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 
Charleston: 

Ashley River Asylum 

Caroline Wilkinson Home 

108 Cannon street. 
Church Home 

67 Anson street. 
St. Philip's Church Home 

142 Church street. 
WiiUam Euston Home 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 
Hot Springs." 

South Dakota Soldiers' Home 

TENNESSEE. 
Hermitage: 

Tennessee Confederate Soldiers' Home 

Johnson City: 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers 

KnoxvUle: 

Mt. Rest Home 

(Rutledge Pike.) 
Memphis: 

Mary Galloway Home 

Manassas and Mom-oe streets. 
Memphis Home for Aged Men 

Dunlop street. 
Nashville: 

Horace Loving Old Ladies' Home 

1814 Morena street. 
Masonic Widows and Orphans' Home 

(Rural Free Delivery No. 10.) 
Old Woman's Home 

136 North Cherry street. 

TEXAS. 
AbUene: 

State Epileptic Colony 

Austin: 

Confederate Home 

Brownsville: 

St. Joseph's Home for the Destitute 

Corsicana: 

Odd Fellows' Widows' and Orphans' Home 

Dallas: 

Buckner Orphans' Home 

St. Matthew's Home for Aged Women 

603 Routh street. 
Fort Worth: 

Cumberland Rest 

Masonic Home 

Grand Prairie: 

Juliette Fowler Orphans and Widows' Home - .. 

Houston: 

Sheltei-tng Arms 

1.517 HutchLns street. 

iNot reported. 



Churches of Bristol 

State of Rhode Island 

Little Sisters of the Poor. 



Disabled soldiers of the Civil Ws 
Aged and infirm poor 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

Protestant Episcopal Church . 



Aged ■ 

Incurable and convalescent wc 



Private corporation . 



Aged men and women . 



City of Charleston. 



Parish Guild of the Church of the 

Holy Communion. 
Protestant Episcopal Church 



Indigent women 

Needy women of the Church 



Parishof St. Philip - 



State of South Dakota. 



State of Tennessee 

United States Government. 
Private corporation 



soldiers and sailors honor- 
ably discharged. 



Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

Masonic Grand Lodge of Tennessee . 
Private corporation 



State of Texas 

State of Texas 

Private corporation . 



Aged women 

Aged and infirm i 

Aged and infirm ' 

Widows and orphans of Masons . 

Aged and infirm women 



Private coiporation 

St. Matthew's Episcopal Cathedr 



Masoiiic Grand Lodge of Texas. 
Christian Church of Texas 



Sheltering Arms Association . 



Indigent Confederate veterans 

Aged, rafirm, blind, and crippled 

Widows and orphans of Odd Fellows 



Widows and orphans. 
Women over 50 years. 



Aged and infirm Christians . 
Widows and orphans of Mas 



Aged and friendless women . 
2 Opened October, 1903. 



sioo... 

None. 
None. 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 



Aged women of the Protestant EpiS' 

copal Church. 
Aged and infirm None 



None. 
None. 
None. 



Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 



None 

None 

SlSOtoSSOO. 



None. 

None. 

None. 

None. 

None. 
None. 

None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 



1856 
1882 



1881 
1852 
1870 



0) 
1902 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



261 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 


































Nimiber 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
pubUc funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 













8 








2 








7 





2 


SO 


SO 


S2,000 


671 


186 








62 








186 








38 







25,000 


672 


96 


95 





63 


30 





100 


100 














(') 


673 





14 








3 








12 





4 





300 


2,392 


674 


40 








7 








40 








12 





1,096 


11,738 


675 





41 








4 








40 





11 





1,000 


9,230 


676 





30 








^ 








26 





14 





955 


9,. 573 


677 





5 








1 








6 





2 





628 


1,289 


678 


20 


38 


2 


24 


38 





24 


28 


1 


^ 







5,000 


679 





15 








(') 








(') 





(1) 





(1) 


150 


680 





4 








4 








4 





1 








750 


681 





24 








2 








20 














500 


682 


4 


61 





1 


5 





4 


56 





7 








3,006 


683 


216 








96 








211 


^ 





26 







39,000 


684 


118 




15 


Q 


33 








106 








10 







12,390 
872 


685 


160 





978 








947 








91 







686 











3 








13 





3 








687 





15 








5 








17 





3 





800 


1,500 


688 


14 








14 








12 





° 


4 





1,456 


1,500 


689 





6 








3 








3 





2 


18 


100 


350 


690 





25 


98 





4 


12 





25 


97 


5 








10, 1.59 


691 





20 

















20 





4 


600 





2,629 


692 


327 





(3) 




145 


97 





119 


82 





62 







(3) 




101 








327 








30 




75,000 


694 





10 





0) 


m 





(') 


(1) 





1 


60 





300 


695 


' 


2 


95 





3 


24 





5 


112 


12 








9,980 


696 





10 


392 


■ 





80 





10 


472 


14 








30,000 


697 





6 








3 








4 





1 








360 


698 





6 








1 








6 





1 





156 


458 


699 





7 


125 





2 


29 





9 


129 


16 








16,995 


700 








11 








38 








22 


4 





(*) 


C) 


701 





4 








9 








4 


1 


1 








500 


702 



3 Opened March 20, 1904. 



> Opened December 20, 1903. 



262 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by — 



Special class cared for. 



Year 
when 
found- 



TEX AS— Continued. 
San Antonio: 

Home for Destitute Children and Aged Persons. 



Brattleboro: 

Home for Aged and Disabled . 
56 Western avenue. 
Burlington: 

Home for Aged Women 

72 St. Paul street. 



St. Joseph's Providence Orphan Asj'lum. 



Private corporation . 
Sisters of Charity. - . 



Orphan and destitute children, and 

aged persons. 
Aged men and v^omen 



None. 
None. 



State of Vermont... 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Sisters of Charity . . . 



St. Peter's Catholic Church 

Rutland Missionary Association. 



Private corporation . 



Aged and infirm soldiers 


None 


Aged and disabled men and women. . 


Not fixed 


Women 60 years and over 


S200 


Care of orphan and destitute children, 
and aged persons. 


None 


Care of infirm Odd Fellows and their 
wives and children. 


None 


Old and infirm women 


Not fixed 


Aged women 


S300 


Aged women 


SlOO 



VIRGINIA. 
Alexandria: 

Old Folks' Home of Alexandria . 



Private corporation. 



Hampton : 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. . . 
(P. O. National Soldiers' Home.) 

Old Folks' Home 

LawrenceviUe: 

Church Home for Aged, Infirm, and Disabled 
Colored People. 
Lynchburg: 

Old People's Home 

1302 Pierce street. 
Norfolk: 

AUmand Home 

48.5 Freemason street. 
Church Home 



United States Government . 

Fraternity corporation 

Private corporation 



Private corporation. 



417 Bute street. 
Lekier Old Folks' Home . 
(Hunterville.) 



Episcopal churches of Norfolk 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Richmond: 

Baptist Home for Aged Women 

46 North Harvie street. 
Hebrew Home for the -\ged and Infirm. 
Home for Needy Confederate Women. . . 

3 East Grace street. 
Lee Camp Soldiers' Home 



Baptist churches of Richmond . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



St. Paul's Church Home for Aged Women. 

100 West Clay street. 
St. Sophia's Home for Old People 

16 Harvie street. 



State of Virginia 

Protestant Episcopal Church of Vir- 
ginia. 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 
and Southern Presbyterian Church 
of Richmond and Manchester. 

St. Paul's Episcopal Church 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 



WASHINGTON. 
Hillyard: 

Deaconess Old People's Home.. 



.\ged and infirm men and women 


None 


Aged and infirm women 


None 


Aged and Indigent members of the 
order. 

Aged, infirm, and disabled soldiers. . . 


None 


None 


Aged men and women, and orphans. . 
Men, women, and children 


None 


None 


Aged and infirm women 

Aged and infirm women 

Aged and indigent female members 
of the Episcopal Church. 


None 


None 


None..' 


Old and infirm colored women 


S25to$50 


Aged and infirm white women 


None 


Aged and infirm 


SlOO 


Aged and infirm men and women 


None 


Aged and needy Confederate women . 


None 




None 


Gentlewomen in reduced circum- 
stances. 


.5200 


Aged women 


S200 



Aged and infirm women . 

Aged and infirm 

Incurables 



None 
S200. 



German Baptist Brethren Chui'ch. 



Methodist Episcopal Church i Aged and infirm . 



State of Washington. 



Disabled soldiers . 
2 Opened early in 1! 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



263 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 


































Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


1 Men. 


Women. 


Children. 










(1) 


(■) 


8 


(') 


(') 


(>) 


(') 


0) 


(•) 


1 


SO 


S96 


S377 


703 


' 


12 





9 


2 





14 


10 














1,996 


704 


92 








60 








99 








27 







18,829 


705 


4 


6 





1 


2 





5 







4 





(') 


2,500 


706 





7 

















7 





2 





999 


1,600 


707 


12 


25 


182 





1 


84 


12 


25 


164 


10 


336 


664 


15,000 


708 


9 


2 











' 


8 


2 





3 








4,000 


709 





o 








10 








10 











(^) 


(=) 


710 





^ 








1 








^ 





2 





500 


1,582 


711 





5 








5 








6 





■ 








1,000 


712 


3 


2 


■ 


1 


2 





3 


4 





1 


(') 


60 


100 


713 





6 





, 











6 














536 


714 


8 








12 








12 








12 





{') 


^ (.') 


715 


3,728 








722 








3,639 








592 







395,256 
453 


716 


















5 


9 










717 


15 


17 


19 


12 


10 


9 


27 


27 


28 


10 








4,440 


718 





2 








1 








2 














50 


719 





6 








1 








6 





1 








450 


720 





7 








1 








7 





3 








1,300 


721 





8 








6 








8 





1 





50 


300 


722 





16 

















16 





6 








4,266 


723 





18 








5 








18 





6 





1,506 


2,750 


724 


2 


4 














2 


3 














1,019 , 725 





11 








8 








18 





1 








458 


726 


263 








72 








261 








29 







30,266 


727 





15 

















15 





7 








4,027 







20 








2 








20 





6 








2,500 


729 


0. 


9 

















8 





4 








1,670 


730 


60 


80 





18 


7 





60 


80 














(') 


731 


i 


21 





1 


6 


3 


2 


22 


3 


6 





1,800 


3,066 


732 


5 


11 





2 


1 





4 


12 





4 








900 


733 


3 


7 





■ 6 


12 





3 


10 





2 


300 


600 


1,600 


734 


363 








108 








■589 








54 







33,355 


735 



'Opened May 21, 1903. 



264 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 

Table 3.— PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintamed by— 



Special class cared for. 



Amount of 

entrance fee 

required. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



WASHINGTON— Continued. 
Vancouver: 

House of Providence 

Wallawalla: 

Odd Fellows' Home 

534 Boyer avenue. 

WEST VIRGINIA. 
Wheeling: 

Home for the Aged , 

West Virginia Home for Aged and Friendless 
Women. 

37 Thirteenth street. 

WISCONSIN. 
Elm Grove: 

St. Joseph's Home 

Fond du Lac: 

Henry Boyle CathoUc Home for the Aged 

Home of the Friendless 

29 East Arndt street. 
Green Bay: 

Odd Fellows' Home 

Manitowoc: 

St. Mary's Hospital and Asylum 

MUwaiikee: 

Home for the Aged 

2000 WeUs street. 

Milwaukee Protestant Home for the Aged 

Bradford street and Downer avenue. 
National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. . 
(P. O., National Home.) 

St. John's Home for Aged Women 

640 Cass street. 
Oshkosh: 

Old Ladies' Home 

Stoughton: 

Norwegian Lutheran Old People's Home 

Waupaca: 

Wisconsin Veterans' Home 

Wittenberg: 

Homme's Orphan Home and Home for the Aged . . 

WYOMING. 
Bufialo: 

Wyoming Soldiers and Sailors' Home 



Sisters of Charity , 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Wasliington. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

School Sisters of Notre Dame 

Sisters of St. Agnes 

Fond du Lac ReUef Society 

Independent Order of Odd Fellows of 
Wisconsin. 

FeUeian Sisters of Wisconsin 

Little Sisters of the Poor 

Private corporation 

United States Government 

Protestant Episcopal Diocese of MO- 
waukee. 

Ladies Benevolent Society 

Norwegian Lutheran Synod 

State of Wisconsin 

United Norwegian Lutheran Church 
of America. 

State of Wyoming 

1 Not reported. 



Orphans, and homeless old men . 



Indigent Odd Fellows and then- 
wives, orphans, and half orphans. 



Aged 

Women 65 years and over, and wom- 
en and gn'ls temporarily friendless. 



Lged and infirm sisters of the order, 
and orphan girls. 



Aged men and women 

Friendless men, women, and children 



Aged and indigent Odd FeUows and 
their wives, widows, and orphans. 



Aged persons, and orphans 

Aged and infirm 

Aged and destitute over 65 years. 



Disabled volunteer soldiers, honor- 
ably discharged. 
Aged and infirm women 



Aged and infirm men and wc 
Aged men and women 



Care of orphans and half orpha 
and aged men and women. 



Not fixed. 
None 



Not fixed. 
S2o 



None. 
None. 
None. 
S300 tc 
None. 
None. 
S200... 
SoOO... 
None. 



None. 



Soldiers and sailors of all wars None 



( 



A 



PERMANENT HOMES FOR ADULTS, OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 265 

OR ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 







NUMBER OF INMATES. 




























Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 
from pay 
inmates, 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 










8 





123 


7 





161 


7 





126 





SO 


(') 


$10,581 


736 


7 


1 


' 


7 


2 


2 


10 


2 


6 


3 





SO 


2,360 


737 





18 








(1) 








(') 





5 





700 


2,497 


738 





15 








5 








17 





4 








1,913 


739 





30 


23 





20 


12 





40 


24 











(1) 


740 


3 


4 





4 


8 





4 


5 





1 


74 


(') 


(^) 


741 


6 


6 








2 





6 


7 





4 


300 


600 


1,200 


742 


8 


6 


20 


3 


2 


13 


10 


7 


22 


6 





600 


5,000 


743 


21 


18 


80 


40 


22 


80 


25 


16 


60 


1 





1,500 


6,500 


744 


96 


100 





23 


15 





100 


97 











600 


4,661 


745 


15 


62 


. 


3 


5 





2 


65 





14 





5,777 


12,230 


746 


2,674 




18 






543 



Q 


Q 


2,539 









463 







307 495 


747 








17 





6 








3,500 


748 


2 


12 








2 





2 


14 





4 





<., 


2,500 


749 


» 17 


20 


0^ 


4 


4 





18 


22 





10 





5,346 


4,000 


750 


412 
6 


321 
12 




104 
4 


■ 





390 


310 





50 




3,248 



104,995 
5,300 


751 


33 


5 




10 


14 


37 


8 





752 


37 


5 





17 








45 


3 





' 




. 


7,500 


753 







266 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORAEY HOMES 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Maintenance 
charge per week 



■mingha 
Mercy ] 



2130 Avenue N. 



ARIZONA. 
Phoenix: 

Florence Crittenton Home. . . 



ARKANSAS. 
Hot Springs: 

Sunshine Home 

Whlttington avenue. 
Little Rock: 

Adeline M. Smith Industrial Home. 



CALIFORNIA. 
Alameda: 

California Girls' Training Home. 
520 RaOroad avenue. 



Oakland: 

Woman's Sheltering and Protection Home. 
66 Sixth street. 
Redlands: 

Settlement, The 



Sacramento: 

Peniel Rescue Home 

1510 Third street. 
San Diego: 

Helping Hand Home and Mission . 
Comer Fifth and J streets. 
San Francisco: 

Chinese Mission Home 

920 Sacramento street. 



Oriental Home 

912 Washington street. 

Peniel Home of Peace 

527 Capp street. 
San Francisco Ladies' Protection and Relief 
Society Home. 

1200 Franklin street. 
San Jose: 

Beth Adriel 

Park avenue. 



COLORADO. 
I Colorado Springs: 

20 Wing Settlement 

Stratton Park. 
I Denver: 

21 I Association Health Farm 

I 17.31 Arapahoe street. 

22 Florence Crittenton Home 

4901 West Colfax avenue. 



Roman's Christian Temperance 
Union of Birmingham. 



Private corporation. 



International Sunshine Society . 



Woman's Home Missionary Society 
of the Methodist Episcopal Church. 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation . 
Salvation Army 



Salvation Army 

Trustees of Anthony Chabot endow- 
ment. 

/Private corporation 

Peniel Missionary Society 

Private association 



Women's Occidental Board of For- 



Private corporation . 



Sisters of Mercy. 



Peniel Mission . 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation. 



Private association. 



Young Men's Christian Association. 
Private corporation 



Cedar and South Evans streets. 
Industrial Training School for Girls • City Temple Institutional Society 

1148 Broadway. | 

Pueblo: 

Home lor Friendless Women ; Woman's Christian Temperance 



2907 Cheyenne avenue. 
Victor: 

Home League Orphanage 



CONNECTICUT. 
Hartford: 

House of the Good Shepherd. . . 
170 Sisson avenue. 



Union. 
Home League of America. 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 
Open Hearth Association 



' Not reported. 



Friendless women and children. 



Unfortunate women and children. . . 

Aged and invalid women, andchildren 
Young negro women 



Homeless or vmdiscipltned and 
abused girls. 



Unfortunate women 

Needy women and children . 



None. 
None. 



Fallen and wayward women and girls. 
SeU-supporting women and girls 



Chinese and Japanese girls . 



Homeless women and wayward 

children. 
Chinese slave girls and women , 



None... 
S2 to So. 



Homeless and erring women . 



Not fixed . 

Not fixed. 
S2 toSo... 

None 

None 

None 



and girls None 



S2.50. 



Consumptive men S5 to S 

S3 

Consumptives None . 



Erring girls and women 

Orphan and homeless girls. 

Friendless women 

Women and children 



Erring women and girls 



Homeless men, inebriates, dl 
prisoners, and wayfarers. 

■^ Women and girls. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 



267 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 


































Income 

from pay 

mmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


CMIdren. 


Men. 


Women. 


ChUdren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 















15 


40 





32 


86 





= 


46 


5 


$1,200 


». 


S3, 000 


1 





4 








9 


9 





4 


7 


1 





20 


1,100 


2 





9 








7 


2 





7 





1 


300 





1,308 


3 





127 








133 








121 





3 





2,400 


4,400 


4 








27 








19 








30 


4 





731 


2,851 


5 





40 








90 


49 





40 


49 


5 


1,000 


4,000 


4,000 


6 





24 


23 





32 


23 





18 


10 


4 


360 


200 


2,400 


7 





28 


11 


. 


90 


27 





45 


10 


4 


54 


19 


2,570 


8 





15 


1 





31 







4 


9 


3 





902 


5,297 


9 


7 


4 





40 


7 





7 


2 





3 


900 


734 


3,070 


10 





7 


« 





66 


35 





12 


« 





150 


330 


1,640 


11 


20 


10 


5 


(>) 


(>) 


G) 


0) 


G) 


(1) 


4 








3,500 


12 





2 35 








253 








239 





3 


33 


35 


3,903 


13 





17 


22 


-0 


51 


52 





11 


19 


6 


1,879 


2,448 


6,527 


14 





57 


38 





32 


58 





32 


78 


11 


6,&'J6 


5,042 


18,831 


15 





5 


12 





5 


7 





2 


18 


2 








3,315 


16 





10 


1 





20 


11 





18 


9 











400 


17 





4 


233 








125 





4 


207 


20 


11,992^ 


6,779 


32,215 


18 





10 


1 





9 


4 





3 


4 


2 


300 





452 


1!» 





6 


7 





14 


9 





8 


4 


2 





339 


1,907 


2Q 


28 








102 








27 








8 





3,000 


5,000 


. 21 





22 


13 





41 


25 





20 


15 


3 


900 


499 


5,500 


22 


75 


70 





200 


114 


« 


75 


65 





55 





54, 169 


96,783 


23 





395 


a05 





383 


•'93 





3 107 


471 


3 


1,200 


957 


8,558 


24 








50 








38 








50 


8 





3,. 371 


6,168 


25 





2 


1 


3 


6 


22 





2 


7 


1 





178 


145 


26 





2 


14 





2 


46 








20 


2 





338 


1,700 


27 





2 19 








= 29 








= 28 











195 


3,606 


28 


70 








21,306 





° 


66 





" 


5 


« 


6,488 


10,762 


29 



1 Between 14 and 21 years. 



*• Under 14 years. 



268 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintamed by- 



Special class cared for. 



CONNECTICUT— Continued. 

Hartford— Continued. 

Shelter for Women .. 

76 Temple street. 
Watkinson Farm School .' 

Albany avenue and Bloomfield road. 



New Haven: 

Calvary Industrial Home. . 

■ 679 Chapel street. 
Florence Crittenton Home. 
78 Ward street. 



DELAWARE. 
Wilmington: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

506 West Fifth street. 



DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 

Washington: 

Bi-uen Home 

436 M street NW. 



FLORIDA. 
Tampa: 

Hephzibah Rescue Home 

508 Colton street. 



GEORGIA. 
Atlanta: 

Florence Crittenton Home. , . 
792 Simpson street. 

Home for the Friendless 

226 Highland avenue. 
Columbus: 

Florence Crittenton Home . . . 
Macon: 

Door of Hope 

658 Arch street. 

Home for the Friendless 

261 Maple street. 
Savaimah: 

Florence Crittenton Home . . . 



ILLINOIS. 
Chicago: 

American Home Finding Association Home. 
3235 Forest avenue. 



Private association 

Private corporation 

Woman's Aid Society of Hartford. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Protestant churches of New 
Salvation Army 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation . 
Private association . . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Private 

Association for Works of Mercy 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

District of Columbia 

Sojourner Tnith Home Association. 
United States Government 



Association. 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 



Private corporation , 

Methodist Episcopal Church, South , 
City of Macon 



Private coi-poration ; 



American Home Finding Association. 
Private association 



Needy women and children 

Youths between 12 and 18 years. 
Wayward girls 



$2.45 

Not fixed . 
None 



Homeless men and discharged prison- 



None . 

None. 

Women and children S3 

Homeless men None. 



Homeless women and children . 
All classes of unfortunates 



All classes of unfortunates. 



Homeless men and women 

Unfortunate girls and their infants . 



Waj'faring men 

Working women and girls. . . 

Ex-soldiers and sailors 

Homeless women wayfarers . 



Not fixed . 
Not fixed. 

None 

None 

50 cents... 
70 cents... 

None 

None 

None 

.50 cents... 

None 

81 toS4... 



Friendless women and children None. 



Unfortunate women and girls Not fixed . 

Fallen women and their children None 

Homeless women and children None 



Homeless women, children, and None. 

youths. 1 

Homeless women and infants I None . 

2 Not reported. 



TEMPORARY HUMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



269 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. Child 



1,095 
9 


30 



209 
3 Girls and children. 



Remaining December .31, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Number 
of paid 
imployees 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 



I Women and girls. 



1,200 
4,756 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



1,033 




SI, 492 
7,5.52 
1,601 

2, 1.37 
1,576 34 
4,931 35 



4,871 38 
5,000 ; 39 
8,273 



1,085 
700 
1,672 
3, 

5,500 
3,878 



41 



270 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



ial class eared for. 



Maintenance 
charge per week 



I LLINO IS— Continued. 

CMcago — Continued. 

Chicago Home for Convalescent Women and Chil- 
dren. 

521 West Adams street. 
Chicago Home for the Friendless 

5059 Vincermes avenue. 
Chicago Municipal Lodging House 

12 North Union street. 
Florence Crittenton Anchorage 

1349 Wabash avenue. 
Haven, The 

286 West Adams street. 
House of Providence 

Orleans and Elm streets. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Orleans and Hill streets. 
Life Boat Rest and Suburban Home for Girls 

436 State street. 
Mercy Home 

2834 Wabash avenue. 
Rest Cottage 

123 South Howard avenue. 
St. Joseph's Home for the Friendless 

409 South May street. 
Star of Hope Mission Home for Women 

110 South Green street. 
Washingtonian Home 

566-572 West Madison street. 
Evanston: 

Grove House for Convalescents 

1729 Livingston street. 
Lake Bluff: 

Agard Deaconess Rest Home 

Peoria: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

415 Richmond avenue. 
Home for the Friendless 

Thrush street and Knoxville avenue. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Star and Faraday streets. 
Springfield: 

Hephzibah Rescue Home 

1200 East Edwards street. 
Springfield Home for the Friendless 

1300 South Seventh street. 

INDIANA. 
Indianapolis; 

Door of Hope 

116 West Michigan street. 
Friendly Inn 

526 West Market street. 

House of the Good Shepherd 

HI West Raymond street. 

Indianapohs Home for Friendless Women 

1731 North Capitol avenue. 
Lafayette: 

Woman's Christian Home 

1434 Main street. .? 

Logansport: 

Home for the Friendless 

630 Race street. 
Richmond: 

Home for the Friendless and Wayne County JaU 
for Women. 

306 South Tenth street. 

Terre Haute: 

Home for the Friendless 

912 Chestnut street. 

IOWA. 
Cedar Rapids : 

Home for the Friendless 

519 North Fifteenth street. 

Sunshine Mission Door of Hope 

610 South Third street. 
Des Moines: 

Benedict Home 

Third street and Forest 

Open Door, The 

213 Walnut street. 

' Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

City of Chicago (Pohce Department) . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Franciscan Sisters 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Workingmen's Home and I;ife Boat 

Mission Corporation. 
Sisters of Mercy 

International Apostolic Holiness Un- 
ion. 
Private corporation 

Private association 

W ashingtonian Home Association. . . 

Private coi-poration 

Methodist Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

Woman's Christian Home Mission. . . 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Union Mission Association of Illinois. 
Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private coi-poration 

Private association 

Logansport Central Woman's Chris- 
tian Temperance Union. 

Home for the Friendless Association, 
Society for Organizing Charity 

Private corporation 

Protestant churches of Cedar Rapids 

Woman's Christian Temperance 

Union. 
Sunbeam Mission 

Women and young girls. 



children discharged from hospitals 

Homeless women and children 

Homeless men and boys 

and their chil- 



Homeless women, and children of 

working mothers. 
Young women seeking employment . 



Erring women and girls . . . 
Rescued gh-ls (maternity) 
Women and children 



Homeless women and children. 
Fallen girls and their children. . 
Inebriates 



Convalescent women and children. 



Deaconesses and Christian workers . 

Unfortunate and destitute women 

and girls. 
Destitute women and children 



Fallen women and girls 
Friendless children 



Erring women and theh- children. 

Homeless men 

Erring women and girls 

Friendless women and cliildren. . . 



Women and children 

Homeless men and women . 
All classes of females 



None. 



None 

None 

None 

SI toS2... 

None 

None 

None 

S3 to S5 . . 

None 

S3......... 

None 

SIO toS15. 



S3 to S7. 

None. . . 
None. . , 
.S1.50..:. 
S2.50.... 



None. 
SI 



None. 
None. 
S2 



$2. 



Friendless men, women, and children. 



None 

Not fixed. 

None 



Dependent children ,. . . ; • None . 

Homeless men, women, and children. j None. 



Erring girls and their children ' None.. 

Friendless and homeless men, women, None. . 
and children. 

••' Includes Ephpheta School for the Deaf. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



271 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 






■ Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public fionds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 













10 


3 





120 







15 


2 


4 


SO 


SO 


$2,600 


59 





35 


217 





525 


1,109 





21 


204 


50 








36,298 


60 


74 








18 892 








67 








g 







7,. 500 


61 


1 


15 


5 





176 


120 





12 


10 


1 








3,500 


62 





8 


16 





87 


74 





8 


16 


4 





360 


2,000 


63 





no 








1,024 








114 











0) 


(') 


64 





2 378 








2 278 








2 371 


■0 











32,705 


65 





8 








38 








7 





2 








360 


66 





85 


10 





1,450 


50 





85 


10 


10 





5,000 


4,500 


67 





8 








38 








9 














1,040 


68 





122 


58 





379 








146 


54 


5 





7,302 


■''17,329 


69 





7 








90 








1 5 














1,075 


70 


103 


10 


, ° 


1,273 


113 





61 


8 





22 





23,766 


30,654 


71 


m 


(->) 


m 





98 


19 





3 


4 


5 





m 


(■■) 


72 


1 


9 





21 


103 


6 





9 





2 





1,412 


1,759 


73 


' 


9 







32 








7 


3 


1 





150 


550 


74 








42 





3 


97 








40 


8 


(>) 


1,183 


4,547 


75 





85 


20 


o' 


28 


13 





72 


30 


1 


480 


2,896 


8,233 


76 





15 


9 





55 


24 





18 


6 











1,000 


77 








48 








141 








75 


6 





400 


4,740 


78 





15 


6 





129 








36 





6 


600 


(1) 


(>) 


79 


21 


. 





2,694 








12 








' 


1,200 





2,000 


80 





6 178 








5 95 








. 5 143 





2 








14,000 


81 





24 


4 





402 


62 





24 


4 


4 


1,200 





2,152 


82 





2 


7 





38 


25 











1 








600 


83 


' 


10 





, ' 








1 


10 





2 


4.50 


156 


200 


84 


. 


23 


4 





24 


30 





5 


6 


2 


1,285 


558 


2,190 


85 


3 


6 


■ 


92 


33 


19 


2 


5 


3 


2 


500 





1,200 


86 








25 








37 








27 


6 


720 


1,559 


2,152 


87 





5 


1 


(°) 


(') 


C) 


C^) 


{«) 


(^) 


4 








2,580 


88 





31 


19 


0, 


39 


29 





33 


17 


2 


1,000 


' 


3,533 


89 


20 


8 


2 


3,636 


2,855 


665 


14 


7 


1 


6 








3,200 


90 



I Opened April 15, 1904. 



' Women and girls. 



<^ Temporarily closed. 



272 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HO]\IES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Maintenance 
i per week. 



1 W A— Continued . 

Des Moines— Continued. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home 

1426 Pennsylvania avenue. 
Dubuque: 

Dubuque Rescue Home 



Iowa Home for the Friendless. 
Fort Dodge: 

HopeHaUNo.3 

Sioux City : 



1 KANSAS. 

j Leavenworth: 

Home for Friendless Women 

! 637 Marshall street. 

' Parsons: 

I Southern Kansas Home for the Friendless . 
I 2329 Grand avenue. 

TopeVa: 

Florence Crittenton Mission 

(Quinton Heights.) 
Wichita: 

j Wichita Rescue Home 

1021 Lafayette street. 



KENTUCKY. 
Lexington: 

Home of the Friendless 

80 West Short street. 



Louis vUle: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

1010 West Jefferson street. 



Home for Friendless Women 

506 West Kentucky street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

728 Eighth street. 



Wayfarers' Lodge 

212-216 Pearl avenue. 
Newport : 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Paducah : 

. Home of the Friendless 

Fourteenth and Burnett streets. 



LOUISIANA. 
New Orleans: 

Convent of the Good Shepherd 

Bienville and Broad streets. 



Home for Homeless Women 

1434 Polj-mnia street. 
Memorial Home 

803 Washington avenue. 
New Orleans Convalescent Home. 
642 Broadway. 



MAINE. 
Auburn: 

Catherine Morrison Home. 
317 Main street. 



King's Daughters' Home 
Lewiston : 

Young Women's Ho'me.. 
Portland: 

Mary Brown Home 

Capisic street. 



Salvation Army. 



Woman's Rescue Society 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 

Private corporation 



Louisville Charity Organization 
Society. 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Private corporation 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 

Private corporation • 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Volunteers of America 



Private corporation 

King's Daughters' Union 

Women's Christian Association. 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



I Women and girls. 



Needy women and children 

Erring girls and their children 

Wayward and fallen wdmen and girls 

Homeless women and children 

Discharged and paroled prisoners 

Unfortunate and erring women and 
their children. 

Fallen girls and their children 

Homeless men, women, and children. 

Unfortunate and erring women and 
their children. 

Penitent women and girls 

Homeless women 

Fallen women and their children 

Wayfarers, and unfortunate women 

with their children. 
Young working women 

Fallen women with their children 

Erring and wayward women and girls 

FaUen, incorrigible, wayward, and 
friendless women and girls; also 
abandoned and half orphan female 
children. 

Discharged prisoners and juvenile 
delinquents. 

Wayfaring men, women, and children. 

Erring women and homeless children. 
Homeless women and children 

LTnfortunate and wayward women, 

and girls and children. 
Women and children , 

Fallen women and their infants 

Convalescents from charity hospitals . 

Homeless girls and children '. . . . 

Fallen women with their children 

Women and girls 

Young women 

Convalescent self-supporting women . 

Unfortunate girls, discharged pris- 
oners, and homeless women and 
children. 

2 Infants. 



None 

None 

None 

Not fixed. 

None 

Not fixed. 

None 

82 

Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 

None 

None 

None 

S2 to S2.50 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 

None 

None 

None 

None 

S2 

None 

Not fixed . 
50 cents... 

None 

None 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



273 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women. Children, 



Admitted during 1904. 



Women. CMldren 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



WnmhPr Amount of 

Number annual sub- 

.^il^L sidy from 

employees, public funds. 



Women. Cliildren. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



2,700 

1,001 

850 



1,100 


101 


1,724 


102 


1,060 


103 


4,029 


104 


3,000 


105 


1,819 


106 


23,211 


107 


1,200 


108 


2,563 


109 


15,661 


110 


1,600 


111 



2, 500 
1,126 



274 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



MARYLAND. 
Baltimore: 

Aisquith Home 

411 Aisquith street. 

Florence Crittenton Home 

837 HoUins street. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Private corporation . ^ . 
Private corporation. . . 
Private association. . . 



Home for Mothers and Infants 

4.50 West Twenty-fifth street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Mount and HoUins streets. 
House of the Good Shepherd for Colored Girls 

Calverton road and Mulberry street. 
St. Martha's House ■. 

73.5 West Lexington street. 
St. Vincent's Home for Working Girls 

108 North Front street. 
Salvation Army Industrial Home 

Montgomery and Sharp streets. 



MASSACHUSETTS. 
Belmont: 

Convalescent Home 



Boston: 

Benoth Israel Sheltering Home 

1.5 Cooper street. 
Boston Industrial Home 

Davis street and Harrison avenue. 
Boston North End Mission Home for Young 
Women. 

31 Worcester square. 
Church Rescue Mission 

1066 Washington street. 
City Temporary Home lor Women and Children . . . 
French Women's Christian Home 

65 Clarendon street. 
Home for Friendless and Fallen Women 

2 Russell place. 
House of Mercy 

17:^ Roxbury street (Roxbury) . 



Immigrant Home 

72 Marginal street (East Boston). 
John Howard Industrial Home 

.560 Massachusetts avenue. 
Mariners' House 



Parker's Helping Hand Home for Aged Men and 
Convalescents. 

, 22 Bellevue street (West Roxbury) . 

Phineas Stowe Seamen's Home 

S North Bennett street. , 



St. Luke's Home for Convalescents 

149 Roxliury street (Roxbury). 
Salvation Array Industrial Home 

132-136 Hampden street. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 

Episcopal Church 

Sisters of Mercy 

Salvation Army 



Private association . . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Episcopal City Mission. 



City of Boston. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 



of the Methodist Episcopal Churcl 
rivate corporation . 



Private corporation . 
Private coi-poration . 
Pi-ivate corporation . 



Special class cared for. ■ ^^^^^ 



i per week. , found- 



Homeless and dependent men . 

Immigrants and seamen 

Homeless and friendles 
Mothers with infants . 



•«2.50 

Not fixed. 
None 



$4. 



Fallen colored girls and women. 



Young women. 
Homeless men. 



Convalescents from acute disease. 



Homeless Jewish men, women, and 

children. 
Unemployed homeless men and wom- 



Wayward young 



Homeless men, discharged prisoners, 

and wayfarers. 
Homeless women and children 



Friendless women and children . . 
Fallen women and their children . 



Immigrants landing at Boston. 

Discharged prisoners 

Seamen and their families 

Intemperate women 

Homeless aged men 



Private corporation I Shipwrecked sailors 

Private corporation | Fallen women 

temporarily unem- 
Homeless convalescent women 



Sisters of Charity ' Young 

ployed 
Protestant Episcopal Church 



Salvation Army 

Salvation Army 

Eastern Missionary Association 

New England Moral Reform Society 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Homeless i 



Unfortunate or fallen women and 

girls. 
Scandinavian sailors and immigrants. 

Women and girls with illegitimate 

children. 
Women temporarily unemploj'ed. . . . 

Inebriate men 



None 

None 

None 

None 

$1 toS2..50. 
$2 to.S2.50.. 
None 



None. 
S3. 50.. 
None. 

None. 

None. 
$4 



None 

None 

None 

$2..50 

None 

Not fixed. 

None 

None 



None. . . 
None. . . 
?2 to S3 . 
None.. . 
None. .. 
None. . . 
,$4.50.... 
S3.50.... 
None... 
.?10 



'Women and young girls. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



275 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On Januarj' 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Men. Women. Children. 



Women. Children. 



440 
7,93.5 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



17 
'Not reported. 



Number 

of paid 

employees. 



Amount of ' Income 

annual sub- 1 from pay 

sidy from j Inmates, 

public funds. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



SI, 815 
1,902 



901 


• 8,2.54 


129 


1,.560 


2,154 


130 


2,259 


1,785 


131 





1,800 


132 


3,476 


10, 781 


133 





2,0C0 


134 


3, 810 


32, 709 


135 





4,S«. 


1.36 







137 





6,727 


138 


2, .300 


2,200 


139 





2,406 


140 





3,767 


141 


2, 143 


40,815 


142 


549 


4,250 


143 


• 


6, 797 


144 


8,473 


16, 220 


145 


629 


5,245 


146 



1,841 


1,924 


148 


135 


3,493 


149 


3,198 


3,4.50 


1.50 





10, 1.33 


151 





4, G.50 


152 


1,486 


.3,469 


1.53 


4,541 


.5,073 


154 


1,.545 


6,412 


155 





.5,017 


1.56 


9,367 


9,667 


157 



276 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



charge per week. 



MASSACHUSETTS— Continued. 

Boston— Continued. 

Wayfarers' Lodge 

30 Hawkins street. 
Welcome House ; 

9 Florence street. 
Chicopee: 

Sherman Rest Home 

292 Chicopee street. 
Dedham: 

Temporary Asylum for Discharged Female Pris- 

Lowell: 

Ayer Home for Young Women and Childi'en 

159 Pawtucket street. 

St. Patrick's Home 

Cross street. 
Lynn: , 

Lynn Worklngmen's Home 

746 Western avenue. 

liarblehead: 

Children's Island Sanitarium 

(Salem Harbor.) 
Milton: 

Milton Convalescent Home 

Canton avenue. 



New Bedford: 

City Mission Rescue Home 

25 North Water street. 



New Bedford Woman's Reform and ReUef Home. 
66 Allen street. 
Revere: 

Ingleside, The 

148 Prospect avenue. 
Springfield: 

. Home for the Friendless 

136 Williams street. 



Watertown: 

Boston Florence Crittenton Home. 
335 Arlington street. 



Wellesley: 

Convalescent Home of the ChUdr 
(Wellesley Hills.) 
Worcester: 

Door of Hope'. 

15 Salem street. • 



Temporary Home and Day Nursery. 
202 Southbridge street. 



MICHIGAN. 
Detroit: 

Florence Crittenton Home. . . 

297 Brush street. 
House of the Good Shepherd. 
792 West Fort street. 



Grand Rapids: 

Salvation Army Rescue Home 

1230 South Division street. 
Muskegon: 

Muskegon Humane Union Home. . 
248 South Terrace street. 



MINNESOTA. 

Home 

Sixth avenue east. 



meapous: 
Bethany Home 

, 3719 Bryant avenue south. 
Florence Crittenton Home 

2014 Twenty-sixth avenue south. 

1 Opened December 1903. 



City of Boston 

Episcopal Church . . . 
Private corporation . 
Priv'ate corporation . 



Wayfaring men 

Fallen and inebriate girls . 



Ayer Home Association . 
Sisters of St. Francis 



Volunteers of America. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Young women and children 

Working women and ymmg girls 

Homeless men, women, and children 
Convalescent children 



City Mission Society of New Bedford 

New Bedford Port Society , . . 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Homeless men 

Destitute seamen. 



Homeless women and girls, and dis- 
charged female ; 



Homeless and needy girls. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 
Private corporation 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 

Children's Hospital- 



Private corporation 

Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd . 

Private corporation 

Salvation Ai-my 



Salvation Army 

Private corporation. 



Private association. 



Private association , 

Private coiporation 

2 Not reuorted. 



Homeless and wayward girls. 
Homeless men 



Fallen and intemperate 
Convalescent women and children. 

Convalescent clnldren 



Fallen women and girls 
Homeless women 



Fallen women, and orphan and desti- 
tute girls. 
Homeless men and wayfarers 



and chil- 
Friendless and homeless children 



Fallen women and their children. 



None. 
None. 



S4.50.. 
None. 



Not fixed. 
None 



Not fixed. 

None 

None 



None. 

None. 
None. 
S3.25.. 



None 

S5toS12. 

None 



None. 

$1 

None. 



Not fixed. 

None 

None 

None 



None. 



Erring women and then-children, and 

foimdUngs. . 
Unfortunate girls and their children. 

3 Women and young girls. 



None 

Not fixed . 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



277 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 










Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 






On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Bemaining December 31, 1904. 


Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 
























Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 












" 








14,002 








115 








6 




$0 


S12, 170 


158 




2 









21 









4 


SO 


(0 


Q) 


159 














14 








14 





1 





40 


194 


160 





32 


6 





90 


10 





37 


9 


7 


530 


126 


9,887 


161 





- 


22 


1 


9 


308 


1 


9 


22 


10 





618 


6,093 


162 





20 


50 





10 


40 





20 


55 


11 





-,.500 


7,339 


163 


62 


6 


12 


(=) 


(^) 


(^) 


28 














(») 


6,000 


164 

















210 











18 








5,000 


165 





7 








162 


70 





4 


1 


3 





90 


2,332 


166 


35 








10,392 








40 








1 





600 


442 


167 











159 

















2 








1,200 


168 





3 


4 





18 


7 





5 


4 


1 





7 


744 


169 





3 


22 





4 


20 





3 


21 


3 





217 


2,520 


170 





10 


5 





65 


77 





9 


9 


3 





420 


1,955 


171 





no4 








3 47 








3 103 





1 





1,234 


16,226 


172 


7 








25 








7 








2 





468 


2,261 


173 





25 








37 





(*) 


m 


W 


1 





526 


3,000 


174 





6 








94 








4 





4 





569 


1,737 


175 








23 








320 


. 





27 


10 





694 


8,887 


176 





4 








5 56 








5 





1 





12 


1,028 


177 





7 








127 








7 











358 


880 


178 





1 


50 





17 


227 





1 


45 


' 





86 


3,432 


179 





17 


23 





102 


57 





15 


19 


3 





745 


1,5.56 


180 





330 


114 





89 


67 





330 


114 


10 





200 


40,000 


181 


225 








5,437 








195 








20 





5,2.54 


23,388 


182 





12 


3 





31 


25 





7 


« 


4 





■ 617 


2,500 


183 





15 


7 





38 


22 





17 


7 


5 





58 


1,551 


184 








10 





1 


32 








15 


3 





292 


'." 


185 





13 


14 





• 69 


25 





17 


14 


4 





340 


3,132 


186 





45 


64 





41 


33 


{") 


'■> 


O 


11 


3,000 


5,266 


6,000 


187 





12 


4 





2 


11 





2 


5 


' 


340 


305 


1,051 


188 



* Closed for repaii 



5 Including girls and infants. 



278 



BENEV(3LENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEIVIPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Year 

Maintenance when 

charge per week, fonnd- 



MINNESOTA— Continued. 

Minneapolis— Continued. 

Union City Mission 

122 Wasliington avenue. 
St. Paul: 

Home for the Friendless 

469 Collins street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Blair street. 
Salvation Army Rescue Home 

669 Jackson street. 
Woman's Christian Home 

480 North street. 

MISSISSIPPI. 
Meridian: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

Fifteenth street and Twenty-second avenue 
Vicksburg: 

Emergency Home 

201 North Cherry street. 

MISSOURI. 
Hannibal: 

Home for the Friendless 

501 North Si.\th street. 
Kansas City: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

;?005 Woodland avenue. 
Helping Hand Institute 

408 Main street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Twentieth and Cleveland streets. 
Protestant Door of Hope 

3211 Holmes street. 
Rest Cottage No. 7 

2737 Wabash avenue. 
St. Louis: 

Berachah Home 

2719 Lawton avenue. 
Convalescent Home for Women 

100 North LefBngwell avenue. 
Convent of the Good Shepherd 

Gravois and Bomberger avenues. 
Hephzibah Rescue Home 

2813 Lucas avenue. 
St. Joseph's Convent of Mercy 

Twenty-second and Morgan streets. 
St. Louis Newsboy s' Home 

Main and Clark streets. 
Salvation Army Children's Home 

1243 North Garrison avenue. 
Salvation Army Rescue Home - 

3740 Marine avenue. 

MONTANA. 
Helena: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

Hauser boulevard. 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Ninth and Hoback streets. 

NEBRASKA. 
Maford: 

Nebraska Industrial Home 

Omaha: 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Fortieth and Jackson streets. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home 

3824 North Twenty-fourth street. 
Scandinavian Young Women's Christian Associa- 
tion Home. 

2010 Davenp.irt street. 

NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
Manchester: 

Night Refu.ge 

133 Laurel street. 

Women's Aid Home 

180 Pearl street. 

W. C. T. U. Mercy Home 

86 Mammoth road. 

1 Not reported. 



Protestant churches of Muineapohs .. 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Salvation Army 

Minnesota Magdalen Society 

Private coi-poration 

Salvation Army 

Private association 

Private corporation ; . . . 

Private association 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private coi-poration 

International Apostolic Holiness 
Union. 

Private corporation ^ 

Protestant Episcopal Church 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Salvation Army 

Salvation Army 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

State of Nebraska 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Salvation Army 

Scandinavian Yormg Women's Chris- 
tian Association. 

Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 



Wayfaring men. women, and children 

Destitute women and children 

Fallen women and neglected children. 
Homeless and fallen women and girls. 
Fallen women and their children . . . . . 



and then' clul- 



White women and children. 



W omen and oluldren . 



Wayfaring men, women, and children. 

Unfortunate and wayward women 

and girls, and children. 
Homeless and wayward girls 



Fallen women and their children. 



Convalescent women from citv hos- 
pitals. 

Unfortunate and wayward women 
and girls. 

Reformed women and giils 



Homeless newsboys and needy men . . 
Homeless children 

Wayfaring women and their children. 



Fallen women and girls . 



Homeless unfortunate girls 

Fallen and wayward women and girls. 



Respectable young women . 



Homeless and wayfaring women, and 

children. 
Homeless men and women 



Homeless and neglected girls . 
Women and young girls. 



.?2 toS3..50... 

US 

None 

None 

S2..W 

None 

None 

.50 cents 

Not fixed. .. 

None 

None 

Not fixed 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

S2..50 to «3.50 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

None 

S2toS4 

None 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHH^DREN— Continued. 



279 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 






























Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
pubUo funds. 


Income 

from pay 

mmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. . 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 










75 








10,9.50 


24 


16 


70 








6 


SO 


■SI, 150 


So. 000 


189 





21 








2 








21 





5 





383 


3,101 


190 





119 


65 





20 


IS 





100 


67 


3 








25,000 


191 





15 


8 





104 


49 





19 


10 


4 





900 


2,025 


192 





'. 


4 





25 








' 


2 


' 





537 


1,017 


193 


" 











3 


2 











1 








349 


194 




3 


3 


19 


38 


27 


2 


1 


1 


2 


600 





500 


195 





■ 2 


12 





1 


16 





1 


22 


' 





60 


720 


196 





13 


13 

■ 





26 


11 





11 


8 


1 


100 


■ 525 


1,200 


19" 


323 


15 


J 


. (') 


(') 


(') 


465 


30 


10 


' 


600 


5,000 


7,000 


198 





mo 








2 75 








2 105 





5 








W 


199 





6 


4 





17 


2 





■ 7 


6 


1 


100 


229 


539 


,200 


(') 


(') 


(') 





37 


12 





6 


1 








(') 


(.") 


201 





16 


S 


' 


95 


47 





14 


9 











2,000 


202 





20 








75 


♦ 1 





13 


] 


(>) 








1,700 


203 





2 245 








2 97 





• 


2 251 





8 





Q) 


(1) 


204 





16 


7 





83 


40 








40 


1 





60 


1,037 


205 





79 


40 





3,323 


90 





87 


46 


10 





(') 


7,558 


206 


23 





127 


35 





400 


7 





11 


5 








1,,500 


207 








26 








55 








30 


1 








400 


208 





. 37 







1.56 


107 





29 


14 








247 


4,015 


209 





10 


5 





20 


13 





7 


7 


1 





210 


1,800 


210 





.30 








2 26 








2 35 











197 


10,119 


211 






4.35 
2130 










*34 
2 90 







■ 


■127 
2 135 















9,000 
10,000 


212 





213 





28 


7 





129 


44 





26 


9 


5 








1,810 


214 





30 








494 








15 





4 





2,309 


4,322 


215 





4 








782 


10 





3 





1 








504 


216 


4 


33 








10 





3 


35 





10 


1,000 


2,176 


7,000 


217 





19 








3 


« 





20 





5 








6,024 


218 



' Opened January 24. 1904 



' Including infants. 



280 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Maintenance 
charge per week. 



NEW JERSEY-, 
Hoboken: 

Salvation Army Mission Home, 
130 Hudson street. 
Jersey City: 

Door of Hope 

41 TJelmoiit avenue. 



Salvation Army 



Private association 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace. 
Private corporation , . . 



Morristown: 

Home for Worthy Destitute Women and Girls. 
3 Mt. Keinble avenue. 
Newark; 

Christian Refuge : , 

109 Mechanic street. 



itan . 



Newark Rescue Home 

15 Spring street. 
Oiange: 

Fair Haven Rescue Home 

32 William street. 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Henry street. 
Paterson: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

700 East Eighteenth street. 

Paterson Rescue Mission 

36 MOl street. 
Plainfield: 

St. Joseph's Home for Working Girls 
(North Plainfield.) 
Trenton: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

West State street. 



NEW YORK. 
Albany: 

Boys' Lodging House 

712 Broadway. 



House of the Good Shepherd. 
Aubirrn: 



Binghamton: 

Refuge, The 

64 Fairview avenue. 
Brooklyn: '■' 

Brooklyn Nursei-y and Infants' Hospital 

396 Hei-kimer street. 
Brooklyn Training School and Home for Young 
Girls. 

1483 Pacific street. 

City Mission Settlement No. 2 , 

14-16 Hillary street. 
German Home for the Recreation of Women and 
Children. 

Gravesend Beach. 

I and Children , 



247 j 
248 



2.51 
252 ! 



Home of Industry 

383 Jay street. 
House of the Good Shepherd. 
Hopkinson avenue. 



m Army Industrial Home. 
28 Raymond street. 



Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Vohmteers of America 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Private coi-poration 

Private i 



Episcopal churches of Orange , 



Private corporation. 
Salvation Army 



Sisters of Mercy 

Private corporation . 



Albany City Tract and Missionary 

Society. 
Dominican Sisters of St. Catherine de 

Ricoi. 
Private association 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Priva te coi-poration 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



Brooklyn City Mission and Tract 

Society. 
German Lutheran churches of 

Brooklyn. 

Private corporation , 



Brooklyn City Mission and Tract 

Society. 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd 



Brooklyn Bureau of Charities . 
Society of St. Vincent de Paul. 

Salvation Army 

Private corporation 



Homeless men . 



Wayward young women 

Homeless men 

Working girls 

Unfortunate women and their chil- 
dren. 

Homeless women 

Fallen women and their children 



None. 
None. 



Homeless men, inebriates, discharged 

prisoners, and wayfarers. 
Aged and infli-m 



Homeless men 

Working women 

Unfortunate and homeless women. 

Homeless boys and men 



Homeless women and children 

Erring women and girls 

Homeless women 



Unfortunate girls, and children 

Friendless infants and their mothers. 
Destitute and delinquent gii-ls 



Homeless men. 



omen mth their children, 
and girls and boys. 

Homeless men temporarily unem- 
ployed. 

Erring women and girls 



Homeless women and children . 

Homeless women 

Homeless men 



None. 
None, 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 



None 

$3.50 to $6. 

None , 

None 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 



None. 
None. 



SI 

S3 to $5. 



Homeless men of Scandinavian na- 
tionality. 
AVomen and young girls. 



None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
None. 
.S4.75.. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



281 









_ NUMBER OF INMATES. 


































Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amoimt of 
armual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 










no 








36, 140 








110 








4 


SO 


S4,133 


83,391 


219 





5 








22 








4 





1 


0, 





750 


220 


121 








63,248 








95 








25 








4,800 


221 





30 








m 








W 





2 





2,150 


4,00C 


222 





1.5 


■ 8 





10 


s 





11 


6 


1 





294 


2,176 


223 





30 

















9 





2 








900 


224 





« 


2 





96 








8 





2 








1,215 


225 





11 


2 





211 








12 





2 








1,162 


226 


2 


ISO 


98 





26 


25 


2 


175 


122 


3 





200 


25,000 


227 


.52 








14,600 








50 








20 





(>) 


(') 


228 


400 


12 





7.5,000 


3,650 


15 


256 


12 





40 








17,000 


229 


18 








219 








20 








7 








6,7.55 


230 


4 


18 





1 


s 





2 


16 


. 


7 





3,000 


5,000 : 231 





1.5 


6 





23 


12 





11 


7 


2 





88 


1,200 1 232 


47 








13, 137 








46 








1 








6,000 233 





14 


2 





18 


2 





18 


2 


10 





1,700 


. 1,.500 234 





10 


6 





28 


14 





10 


' 


3 








2,000 235 








21 


2,711 





1,499 


7 





5 


1 





409 


870 . 236 





17 








(') 








(') 











(1) 


(:) 237 





23 


6 





84 


21 





21 


4 


2 


2,183 





4,846 ' 238 





2 104 








2 82 








2 106 





4 


0) 


5,618 


8,991 , 239 





,29 








7 








29 





7 


507 


4,008 


6,171 240 





6 


4 





16 


5 





3 


2 


2 





300 


1,200 ' 241 





12 


72 





21 


111 





12 


72 


12 


4,920 


1,817 


11,088 i 242 





1.34 








<29 








Ml 





6 


2,075 


4.58 


4,689 


243 


168 








(1) 








168 








10 





8,548 


7,114 


244 





6 


2 





216 


112 





11 





4 





3,174 


4,320 


245 





16 


72 





184. 


■ 200 





11 


56 


15 


4,103 


667 


9,100 


246 


14 








(1) 








14 








14 





12,411 


13,703 


247 





M32 








2 352 








2 446 





6 


11,778 


IfiO 


.55,488 


248 





(1) 


Q) 





(*) 


(1) 




■ 


(>) 


(1) 


2 





263 


(') 


249 





(') 








0) 








(') 





4 





(0 


(') 


250 


43 








2,650 








57 








8 








13,500 


251 


35 








1,523 








45 








6 





7,803 


8,f.24 


252 



1 Part of New York city. 



I Women and girls between 12 and 21 years. 



282 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintamed by- 



Special class cared for. 



Maintenance 
charge per week. 



Year 
when 
found- 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

Broolilyn — Continued. 

Wayside Home 

352 Bridge street. 
Buffalo: 

Asylum of Our Lady of Refuge 

485 Best street. 
Homestead Lodging House 

80-86 Loyd street. 



Private association . 



Wayward gti'ls and intemperate 



Sisters of Our Lady of Charity 

Christian Homestead Association . 

Private corporation 

King's Daughters . . . , 



Rescue Home 

69 Cottage street. 
Elmira: 

Anchorage, The 

955 College avenue. 
Flushing, Long Island: * 

Hope Hall 



Woman's Christian Temperance Union 



Seamen, artisans, and homeless men. i 70 cents to SI. 25. 

Erring and fallen women i $1. 50 

Homeless young women I (0 

Discharged women prisoners, and I None 

friendless gifls. | 

Young women, and Infants | Not fixed 



Volunteers of America 
Midnight Mission 



Mt. Vernon: 

New York Christian Home for Intemperate Men . . 
New York: ^ 

Bowery Branch of the Young Men's Christian 



Discharged male prisoners ! None 

Fallen and wayward girls i None 

Private coi-poration j Inebriates i .S3 to S40 . 

Young Men's Christian Association . . , Destitute men , S2.50 



Elizabeth Home for Girls , 

307 East Twelfth street. 
Emergency Shelter for Women with Children. 

311 East Twelfth street. 



Children's Aid Society. 
Children's Aid Society. 
Private association . . . 
Private corporation . . . 
Private corporation . . . 



Not fixed. 



Childi-en and unemployed women 



Working women and girls S2.50 to S3 . 



Private association i Girls between U and 18 years i None . 



273 

274 ! 



Hebrew Sheltering House and Home for the Aged . . 

229-231 East Broadway. 
Home for Scandinavian Immigrants 

22-24 Greenwich street. 
House of Mercy 

Two hundred and fourteenth street and 
Bolton road. 



Private association . 



Protestant Episcopal Church . 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Sisters of the Divine Compassion . 



Woman's Home Missionary Society of 

the Methodist EpiscoparChurch" 
Private association 



Woman's Prison Association , 

Private coi-poration 

Sisters of Divine Providence. . 



New York Foundling Hospital 

175 East Si.xty-eighth street. 



St. Raphael's Society for Protection 
of German CathoUc Immigrants. 



Private corporation 

Rosary Society 

Department of Public Charities. 
Sisters of Charity 



Private corporation . 



New York Home for Convalescents 

433 East One hundred and eighteenth street. 
1 Women and girls. _ ^ Part of New York city. 



Hebrew immigrants, wayfarers, aged i None. 

persons, and convalescents. 
Immigrant men, women, and children. S1.25 . . 



Fallen and inebriate women, 
wayward girls. 



Fallen and wayward women and girls.; None.- 

Delinquent or waywardlv inclined None 

giris. 
Immigrant women and girls Not fixed . 



Homeless men 

Discharged women prisoner 
Italian immigrants 



None. 
None. 
$3 



Friendless French girls i S3.50 . . 

Immig^-ant men.women, and children . None . 
Immigrant men, women, and cluldren . None . 

Fallen women 

English speaking immigrant girls . . . 
Homeless men, women, and children 



Foundlings, abandoned children, 
homeless mothers, and maternity 
cases. 

Homeless convalescent women 




Brooklyn and Flushing. 



TEMP(3RARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



283 



NUMBER OF INMATES 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 190i. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



NnrnhPT- I -^Jnount of i Income 1 rp.^., .„-^ 
^fTaid ! %^rfrn^^" ''tZJ.7 o°mii^fe- 
^°^P'°y--|pub1fc&.| Tg^r' : nance, 1903. 



76,717 




416 
3,212 



3,718 



1,237 

(10) 



Women. • Children. 



(=) 
2,458 



578 

(10) 

154 
1 2,078 
7,185 



Women. ( Children. 



23,131 





20,556 



6,524 
5,467 



7,263 
2,531 





S7,026 


253 


2 14,775 


254 


6,083 


255 


4,909 


256 


1,034 


257 


1,500 


258 


2,000 


259 


(=) 


260 



28,766 
10,454 
3,063 
47,064 
5,500 
2,144 
3,313 
13,456 
5,832 
10,434 
16,638 

106,280 
7,395 ' 
3,000 

18,705 
7,314 



10,000. 285 



Additional outdoor i 



284 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and : 



Special class cared for. 



Maintenance 
charge per week. 



Year 
when 
found- 



NEW YORK— Continued. 

New York— Continued. 

New York Infant Asylum 

Sixty-first street and Amsterdam avenue. 

■ New York Magdalen Benevolent Home 

(Inwood.) 

St. Barnabas House 

304-306 Mulberry street. 



St. Zita's Home for Friendless Women. . 

123-125 East Fifty-second street. 
Salvation Army Industrial Homa 

528 West Thirtieth street. 



Shelter for Respectable Gii'ls 

159 East Forty-sixth street. 
Swedish Lutheran Immigrant Home. 

5 Water street. 
Swiss : 



'. Second avenue. 



Yoxmg Woman's Home 

341 West Thirtieth street. 
PeekskUl: 

Noyes Memorial Home 

636 Main street. 



Rochester; 

Door of Hope 

293 Troup street. 

People's Rescue Mission 

134-138 Front street. 
Saratoga Springs: 

Home of the Good Shepherd 

State street and Greenfield avenue. 
Syracuse: 

Shelter for Unprotected Girls 

206 Roberts avenue. 

Woman's Christian Association Home 

518 South Salina street. 
Tappan: 

Door of Hope 

Tarrytown: 

■ St. Faith's House 

53 South Broadway. 
Troy: 

Bethesda Home 

566 Foui'th avenue. 
Mt. Magdalen Reformatory of the Good Shep- 
herd. 

Peoples avenue. 

Seton House 

548 River street. 



Utioa: 

Willard Home 

54 Broadway. 



NORTH CAROLINA. 
Asheville: 

Allen Industrial Home and School , 
249 College street. 



Greensboro: 

Rest Cottage No. 3 

335 West Lee street. 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 



New York Protestant Episcopal City 

Mission Society. 
FeUeian Sisters 



Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Salvation Army 

Salvation Army .' 

Salvation Army 

Protestant Episcopal Chiu-ch . 



Fallen and inebriate women 

Homeless women and cliildren 

PoUsh and Lithuanian immigrants . . . 

Employed or miemployed respectable 

young women. 
Itahan immigrant men, women, and 

children. 
Homeless women, iuebriates, and 

discharged female prisoners. 



Homeless and faUen women, and in- 
fants. 
Working women and girls 

Young women 



Swedish EvangeUcal Lutheran Au- 

gustana Synod. 
Swiss colony of New York city, and 

Swiss Govei-nment. 
Private corporation 



Scandinavian and Finnish immi- 
grants. 
Homeless men and women 



Friendless and fallen girls 



St. Mary's Hospital of New York 
city. 



Convalescents and Incurables . 



Private corporation 

Private association 

Protestant churches of Rochester. 



Convalescent women and young chil- 
dren. 

Women and children 

a and wayfarers 



Not fixed. 

None 

None 

S3 

Not fixed. 

None 

None 

None 

None 

S4toS5... 

$4.50 

None 

None 

$4 



None. 



$10.... 
None. 



Episcopal Church. 



Private corporation. 
Private association. . 



Private association . 
Episcopal Church . . 



Unprotected and wayward gu-ls. 
Working women under 30 years. 

Girls of the street 

FaUen girls 



$lto.$2 1877 

$3to$4 : 1886 

None 1890 

None 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 

Sisters of Charity 

Sisters of Charity 



Fallen women, and children in moral .S2. 
danger. 



Working girls , $3.50 to .54. 



Private corporation . 



Private corporation. 



S5,391 men, women, ; 



Fallen women, and children under 6 

years. 
FaUen women and girls, and children, t S5 



$1.50.. 
None. 



FaUen girls, and children i None . 

3 Nominal charge for lodgings. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



285 









NUMBER OF INMATES. 








j 


























Number 

of paid 

emplos'ees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
pubUc funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mamte- 
nanee, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


RemainiriB December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 











73 


105 





407 


584 





94 


166 


56 


824,435 


83,932 


834,260 


289 





* 60 








111 








43 





10 


1,215 


0) 


15,835 


290 





43 


30 





1,146 


634 





53 


34 


9 








10,727 


291 


(1) 


(1) 


(1) 


{') 


{') 


(2) 


(') 


W 


(1) 


» 10 





2,966 


3,012 


292 





53 


3 





20,768 


178 





57 


6 








1,300 


12,027 


293 


6 


9 


3 


87 


178 


203 


2 


13 


9 


2 








3,688 


294 





125 








(') 





. 


(1) 





1 


6,000 





12,300 


295 


50 








500 








55 








m 








16,000 


296 





40 


12 





208 


28 





28 


8 


9 








5,000 


297 





96 








27,651 








84 





4 





4,022 


4,236 


298 





11 








559 








11 





4 





2,087 


5,947 299 


26 


6 





3,014 


1,316 


246 


16 


5 





9 


3,256 


4,500 


11,245 300 


17 


5 





135 


15 


1 


19 


7 





4 








2,282 301 





24 








119 








26 





2 


2,086 





5,383 


302 





25 


° 





423 








24 





4 





3,450 


3,627 










20 








16 








19 


4 








2,708 


304 





7 


1 





42 


14 





7 


3 


2 








750 


305 





4 


2 





32 








7 





2 





350 


2,010 


306 


119 








6,000 








133 








9 





2,915 


7,522 


307 





21 








14 








23 





4 





1,200 


3,000 


308 





4 47 


« 





.33 








"38 





7 





3,842 


6,385 


309 





19 








538 


75 





6 


10 


5 





2,836 


3,044 


310 





<9 


2 





4 70 








"12 





3 








3,679 


311 





"18 








10 








15 





1 








5,320 


312 





8 


6 





17 


5 





8 


3 


1 





60 


1,110 


313 





135 


43 





63 


24 





131 


58 


4 


7,201 


397 


135,. 300 


314 





*30 








no 








4 22 





3 





4,883 


6,501 


315 


9 


7 





197 


228 


68 


5 


7 


14 


6 





115 


8,254 


316 


2 


14 


s 





47 








11 





' 





(') 


(■') 


317 





30 








(>) 








47 





6 





774 


4,130 


318 





6 







15 


8 





2 


2 











('') 


319 





15 


12 





18 


12 





16 


14 


3 


300 


157 


1,875 


320 





4 


3 





19 


11 





7 


2 











470 


321 



' Women and girls. 



» Opened July, 1903. 



' Opened June, 1903. 



286 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



NORTH DAKOTA. 
Bismarck : 

Florence Crittenton Home ^ . . 

419 Second street. 
Fargo: 

Woman's Christian Temperance Union Home. 
(South Fargo.) 



OHIO. 
Carthage: 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Cincinnati: 

Cincinnati Union Bethel .' . . . 

306-312 East Front street. 



Supervised and maintauied by- 



Rescue Home 

330-332 George street. 
Sacred Heart Home 

414 Broadway. 
Cleveland: 

Dorcas Invalids' Home 

600 East Madison avenue. 
Hebrew Shelter Home 

292 Mayflower street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Sterling avenue and Sibley street. 
Light and Hope Mission 

59 Michigan street. 
Retreat, The 

1450 St. Clair street. 



Salvation Army Working Men's Home. .. 

86 Michigan avenue. 
Temporary Home for Friendless Women. 

309 Spring street. 
Training Home for Friendless Gli'ls 

377 FrankUn avenue. 



Columbus: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

1166 East Main street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Broad and Sandusky streets. 
Rescue Home for Girls 



Sprtagfield: 

Women and Girls' Boarding 1 
98 West High street. 
Toledo: 

Toledo Door of Hope 

828 Starr avenue east. 



ungstown: 

Florence Crittenton Home. . . 
1161 McGufiey street. 



OKLAHOMA. 
Guthrie : 

Oklahoma Rescue Home 

1021 East Noble avenue. 



OREGON. 
Portland : 

Florence Crittenton Home 

East Thirty-first and GUsan streets.. 

House of the Good Shepherd 

East Twentieth and Ir\'ing streets. 

1 Not reported. 



Private corporation 

Woman's Christian Temperance 
LTnion of North Dakota. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private association 

International Apostolic Holiness 

Union. 
Sisters of Mercy 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Sisters of St. Joseph 

Dorcas Society of Cleveland 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Missionary Society Light and Hope. 

Private association 

Ladies of the Immaculate Heart of 

Mary. 
Salvation Army 

Salvation Army 

Cleveland Associated Charities 

Woman's Christian Temperance 
Union. 

Private corporation . .•. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private association 

Oberlin Missionary Home -Association 

Woman's and YoungWoman's Chris- 
tian Association. 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

2 Women and gii-ls. 



Special class cared for. 



Unfortunate women, and children None . 



Fallen women and girls, and children. 

Wayfaring men 

Fallen women and their infants 

Destitute women and children 



None 

SI 

None 

Not fixed. 

None 

None 



Wayward yoimg girls and women 

Wayfarers..' ..j None 

Not fixed 
None 

Yoimg working girls $2.50. 



Unfortunate and indigent women 

and wayfarers. 
Erring white 



InvaUd women 

Homeless men, women, and children 

Fallen women, and chDdren 

Homeless men 

Wayward girls 

Working girls 

Fallen girls 



Homeless men, wayfarers, and dis- 
charged prisoners'. 

Homeless men and women, and way- 
farers. 

Homeless young women and girls. . . 



None 

None 

None 

60 to 90 cents . 

None 

$2.50 to $3 

None 

70 cents 

None 

SI to S2.S0 



Unfortunate i 



, and children 



None. 



Year 
when 
found- 



1873 
1864 
1902 
1858 
1870 
(>) 



Wayward girls, and children needing | SI 

protection. 
Wayward girls and unprotected cliil- ', $1 

dren. 



Care of children of foreign 
Women and gii'ls 



Unfortunate women, and children 



Fallen women, and children imder 
years. 



Unfortunate women, and children . . . 

Wayward girls 

■* Women and young girls. 




TEMPORAEY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



287 



iJMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women. Children. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Men. Women. Children. 



54,700 

9,846 





Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Women. Cliildren. 



Niunber 
of paid 
mployees. 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
pubhc funds. 



froTpay i Total cost 
irnnntpi of mamte- 
^gQc^ ' nance, 1903. 



•SISO 
624 






2,448 


326 




738 


2,460 327 







6,000 328 




(') 


(1) 329 







1,200 330 


! 


2,514 


6,628 331 







2,000 332 




8,000 


7,000 333 


1 


1,500 


5,706 334 







675 335 




800 


14,200 336 




1,200 


1,800 337 




1,276 


6,085 338 




5,000 


6,000 1339 


1; 





2,740 340 




7,388 


7,820 341 


Ir 


40 


4,000 342 




310 


2, 129 343 


1 


221 


1,287 344 




796 


7,293 345 




936 


11,742-346 




5, -581 


6,468 347 




0) 


448 348 







• 904 349 




25 


709 


350 





('-) ■ 352 

2,000 353 



years and under. 



' Opened December 28. 1903. 



288 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and ruaintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Year 

Maintenance when 

charge per week, found- 



OREGON— Continued. 

Portland— Continued. 

Salvation Army Rescue Home 

762 Vancouver avenue. 



PENNSYLVANIA. 
Allegheny : 

Beulah Home 

65 Sheridan avenue (Bellevue). 



House of the Good Shepherd 

(Trov HiU.) 
Erie: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

323 West Twenty-third street. 
Harrisburg: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

213 Verbecke street. 
Hazelton; 

Home, The 

224 South Brood street (West Hazelton). 



Salvation Army. 
Salvation Army. 



; prisoners, and way- 



Private corporation Homeless men, women, and children. None 

Wayward girls ' Not fixed . 

Wayward and delinquent girls ' None . 

Private corporation Unfortunate women i Not fixed . 



Women's Christian Association 

Pittsburg and AUegheny. 
Sisters of the Good Shepherd 



Private corporation 

United Charities of Hazelton. 



Unfortunate women with children ... None . 

Destitute and friendless children, and [ None . 
aged and infirm. 



Norristown: 

St. Joseph's Protectory for Girls 

Main and Sandy streets. 
Oakboume: 

James C. Smith Memorial Home 

Philadelphia: 

Door of Blessmg 

4220 Chester avenue. 

Florence Crittenton Home ♦ 

1.39 Queen street (Germantown). 



Gahlee Mission 

823 Vine street. 
Home for the Homeless 

708 Lombard street. 
Home of Industry 

Seventy-third street and Paschall avenue 
(West Philadelplaia). 
House of Industry 

718 Catherine street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 

Fairmount avenue and Thirty-fifth street. 



Philadelphia Protestant Episcopal Women convalescing from all diseases 
City Mission. | except contagious and infectious. 

Discharged female prisoners 



Private association 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Episcopal Church 

Private corporation 

Private corporation ! Discharged 

I 



Homeless women, inebriates, and di; 

charged female 
Inebriate men... 



briate and wayfaring men. 
Homeless women and children 



prisoners 



Howard Institution 

1612 Poplar street. 



Magdalen Society of Philadelphia 

213 North Twenty-first street. 



Private corporation '' Homeless women and cliildren | None . 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd | Unfortunate girls and women I .S3 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd I Wayward colored women and girls. ! None. 

; and unprotected colored children, j 
Association of Women Friends I Homeless women, inebriates, dis- None. 

j charged prisoners, and wayward 




Private corporation i Fallen women and girls . 

Private corporation ' Fallen women 

Private corporation Indigent men 



None. 
None. 
None. 



Tabernacle Home Missionary and Industrial 
School for Women. 

226 North Coulter street (Germanto\vn). 
Temporary Home for Women and Children 

50.5" North Sixth street. 



Private corporation , Unfortunate women and their chil- ' None 

' dren. 
Salvation Army Fallen women and their children None 

Private corporation I Homeless men None 

Protestant Episcopal Church | Women and girls with their infants. ..[ None 

Tabernacle Baptist Church Homeless colored single women ' Not fixed . 



Private corporation . . . 
Western Soup Society. 



Homeless women and cliildren S2.50 . 

; women with infants ! S2 



1 Women and girls 



PMladelpliia Society for Organizing Wayfaring men, women, and children. None. 

Charity. 
Philadelpliia Society for Organizing Wayfaring men, women, and children.! None. 

Charity. ] 

reported. ^ Young girls. ■• Formerly "Door of Hope. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDKEN— Continued. 



289 



NUMBER OF INMATES. 



On January 1, 1904. 



Women. Children 



23 
5 290 



Admitted durmg 1904. 



Men. Women. Children. 



5 Women and young girls. 
30952—05 19 



i Closed during 9 months of 1904. 



Remaining December .31, 1904. 



Men. Women. Children, 



Ntunber 
of paid 
imployees. 



Includes Wayfarers' Lodge. No. 2. 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
pubUc funds. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 



' Included in Wayfarers' : 



SI, 157 
2,060 






1, 703 





1,400 


4,202 


10,967 


1,997 


3,286 


C) 


1,838 



3,446 
5,442 

2,616 
2,155 

I 10,000 
(«) 

No. 1. 



290 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



Special class cared for. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



PENNSYLVANIA— Continued. 

Philadelphia— Continued. 

Western Temporary Home 

35 North Fortieth street. 

Whosoever Rescue Home 

48 East Stafford street (Germantown). 
Pittsburg: 

Bethesda Home 

1410 Colwell street. 



Private corporation . 
Private association . 



Destitute women and children i SI to S1.50. . 

Wayfaring men None 



Curtis Home 

Breckenridge avenue. 
Florence Crittenton Home. . . 

1852 Center avenue. 



RoseUa FoundUng Asylum and Maternity Hosi 
pital. 

CUff and Giim streets. 
Reading: 

Hope Rescue Mission 

228-230 Wood street. 
House of the Good Shepherd , 

Soranton : 

Florence Crittenton Home 

712 Harris 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation. 



Abandoned children and homeless and Not fixed . 
needy mothers. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 
Private corporation 



Homeless men. 



None. 
None. 



Home for the Friendless 

Adams avenue and Richmont street. 
House of the Good Shepherd 



Sisters of the Good Shepherd. 



St. Joseph's Foundling Home and Maternity Hos- 
pital. 

1850 Adams street. 
Wilkesbarre: 

United Charities Home 

15 West Northampton street. 
WiUiamsport: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

675 Campbell street. 



RHODE ISLAND. 
Providence: 

Bethany Home of Rhode Island. 
Ill South Angell street. 

New England Rest Cottage 

4 Avon street. 

Providence Rescue Home 

41 Beacon avenue. 



SOUTH CAROLINA. 
Charleston: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

63 Washington street. 

Columbia: 

Door of Hope 

1309 Gates street. 



TENNESSEE. 
Chattanooga: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

625 East Fifth street. 



Knoxville: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 

Woodbine avenue. 
Robert N. Strong Home.. . 



louse of the Good Shepherd. 
Lumpkin street. 



Nashville: 

Florence Crittenton Home. 
613 Ew 



United Charities Society. 
Private corporation 



Private corporation . 



Private corporation 

Salvation Army 

Prisoners' Aid Association. 



Private association. 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation 

Young Women's Christian Associa- 
tion. 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 



Private eorporation. 
Women and young girls. 



Unfortunate girls None 

Homeless women and children Not fixed . 

Wayward girls and unprotected chil- None 

dren. 

Children and agsd persons None 



Men, women, and children tempora- None, 
rily in need. 



Unfortunate and wayward girls None . 

Fallen women and girls with infants .■ None. 

Wayfaring men None. 

Discharged female prisoners and re- None. 
formed girls. 



L and children ' None . 



Homeless young working women and j $2.25. 
giris. 



and chil- • None. 



1874 



2 Opened October, 1903. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



291 







NUMBER OF INMATES. 
































Number 
ol paid 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1,' 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women 


Children. 













1 







84 


207 








6 




SI, 500 


S208 


$.3,011 


387 


79 








356 








79 
















31,900 


388 





" 16 


3 





74 








13 







2,500 


656 


3,032 


389 





15 


8 


1 


65 


23 


1 


8 


10 




2,000 


250 


2,500 


390 





8 


6 





37 


19 





7 


2 







150 


1,044 


391 





45 


106 





142 


271 





56 


124 


18 


.3,000 


10,035 


.36,631 


392 


40 








10,829 








56 













2,457 


2,4.36 


393 





UOl 








124 








196 










300 


10,516 


394 





12 


1 


p 


29 








14 


1 


2 








970 


395 





28 


54 





26 


52 





29 


42 


6 


1,000 


1,243 


4,525 


396 





100 


50 





100 


52 





100 


52 


5 





» 


10,000 


397 


1 


22 


.52 


1 


32 


220 


1 


21 


70 


12 


1,500 


1,912 


4,760 


39S 





1 


6 


35 


62 


132 


2 


6 


14 


6 


200 





5,116 


399 





10 


« 





16 








« 


2 


1 








800 


40O 





16 








14 








18 





3 


0' 


1,854 


2,355 


401 





11 


4 





30 


4 





4 


1 











561 


402 





12 


2 





106 








13 





2 








2,200 


403 


45 








248 








38 











. 


(2) 


C-) 


404: 





8 


1 





24 


' 





3 


1 


2 


1,000 





2,000 


405 





13 


11 





25 


15 





14 


6 


2 


400 


100 


1,200. 


406 





12 


6 





36 


15 





15 


' 











1,263. 


407 





11 


12 





27 


16 





4 


5 


1 


942 


169 


951 


40S 





11 


6 





39 








19 


6 


1 





e) 


700' 


409^ 


0. 


15 








25 








12 





3 





200 


600 


410 





114 


34 





114 


34 





114 


34 


2 





1,000 


10,000 


411 





48 








•»94 








*10 





1 








850 


412 





27 


20 





17 


2 





22 


7 


3 


S50 


75 


2,658 


413; 



* Not reported. 



' Including infants. 



292 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Special class cared for. 



TEXAS. 
Arlington: 

Beraohah Industrial Home. 



Dallas: 

, Anna B . Cunningham Mission Home . 
229 South Carroll avenue. 



Fort Worth: 

Delia Collins Rescue Home 

Railroad avenue and South Main street. 



Galveston: 

Letitia Rosenberg Woman's Home 

Avenue and Twenty-fifth street. 
Houston: 

Florence Crittenton Rescue Home 



San Antonio: 

House of Refuge 

Rio Grande and Montana streets. 

San Antonio Rescue Home 

223 South San Saba street. 
Waco: 

Home, The •. 

South Tenth street. 



UTAH, 
den: 
Florence Crittenton Home. 



VERMONT. 
Burlington: 

Home for Friendless Women. 
260 Shelbume road. 



VIRGINIA. 
Alexandria: 

Florence Children's Home 

406 Duke street. 
Florence Crittenton Children' 
408 Orinoco street. 



Home . 



Lynchburg: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

1801 Taylor street. 
Norfolk: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

203 Chapel street. 
Richmond: 

Spring Street Home 

601 Spring street. 
Roanoke: 

Florence Crittenton Home 

(Rural Free DeUvery No. 3.) 



WASHINGTON. 
Seattle: 

City Mission Home 

813 Alder street. 



Florence Crittenton Home 

(Dunlap.) 

House of the Good Shepherd 

413 Ninth avenue. 
Spokane: 

Salvation Army Rescue Home and Hospital. 
733 Chandler street. 
Tacoma: 

White Shield Home 

4214 Huston street. 



WEST VIRGINIA, 
Wheeling: 

Florence Crittenton Rescue Homi 
139 Sixteenth street. 



Home of the Good Shepherd. 
Edgington lane. 



Woman's Home Mission Society of 
the Methodist Episcopal Church, 
South. 

Private corporation 



Private corporation. 
Tarrant county 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 



Sisters of Our Lady of Charity. 



Home Association of Waco. 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation. 



Private corporation. 
Private corporation. 

Private corporation . 



Churches of Richmond . 
Private corporation 



Private association 

Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Salvation Army 

Woman's Christian Temperance 
Union. 



Private corporation 

Sisters of the Good f hepherd . 



Erring girls, and children 



Unfortunate girls and their children. 
Homeless women and cliildreu 



Homeless women . 



and girls with 
tneir mtants. 

Homeless women and their children. . 



Homeless women and cliildren. 



Unfortunate girls, and children 



Unfortunate women. 



Children, and mothers with children 

Unfortunate colored women, and 
homeless colored children. 

Homeless and friendless girls, and 
children. 

Erring girls and their children 

Fallen women under 35 years 

Unfortunate or destitute women and 
their children. 

Homeless women and cliildren 

Unfortunate, homeless, or friendless 

women, and children. 
Female delinquents, and orphans . . . 

Unfortunate girls with their children 

Fallen girls with their children 



Fallen women with their children, 

and discharged female prisoners. 
Wayward girls and improtected chil- 



N.one 

Not fixed. 
None 

$2. .50 

None 

None . 

Not fixed. 

None 

None 

None 

None 

SI to S2.50 

None 

Not fixed. 

Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 

Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 
Not fixed. 

$1.25 

None 

None 

None 

Not fixed. 

None 

None 



1 Opened May 14, 1903. 



'Not reported. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



293 



1 






NUMBER OF INMATES. 








Number 

of paid 

employees. 


Amount of 

sidy from 
pubUc funds. 


Income 

from pay 

mmates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On January 1, 


1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 













10 


6 





57 








18 


6 


3 


•SO 


O 


(') 


414 





60 


20 





50 








46 





« 





SO 


85,500 


415 





e 


3 





116 


. 


= 


10 





2 








1,100 


416 





12 


__ 





23 








3 





2 





(') 


1,200 


417 





1 


42 





' 


81 








46 


4 







2,898 


418 





27 








3 








27 





3 








2,500 


419 





6 


4 





31 








8 





1 


(■) 





1,085 


420 





2 


3 





3 


3 





3 


3 











113 


421 





1 


1 





35 


13 





8 














(') 


422 





349 








336 








3 59 














5,000 


423 





45 


25 





20 








26 


19 


1 








4,500 


424 


1 


11 


2 


1 


250 





1 


15 





' 


200 


133 


1,150 


425 





3 


2 





12 


15 





10 


15 


^ 


300 





600 


426 





• 11 








31 








5 





■ 





60 


1,200 


427 








64 


p 





48 








52 


2 





820 


1,485 


428 





6 


36 





10 


30 





4 


37 


3 





425 


1,800 


429 





10 


8 





17 


14 





11 


8 


2 


500 


100 


1,335 


430 





2.3 








46 


6 





18 


2 


2 


300 


300 


1,000 


431 





(=) ■ 








25 








6 





2 





95 


600 


432 





11 


9 





27 


10 





18 


7 


2 


240 


100 


1,200 


433 





8 


32 





48 


145 





10 


4C 








200 


2,000 


434 





17 


5 





36 


28 





21 


10 


2 





100 


2,626 


435 


. 


^^96 








C) 








3 105 





1 





(■') 


(2) 


436 





13 


9 





49 


17 





12 


10 


4 


600 


465 


2,583 


437 





ns 


(') 





(^) 


(2) 





(2) 


(=) 


2 





C) 


C^) 


438 





5 


. 3 





40 








3 





2 








1,200 


439 





« 


4 102 








*95 








nis 


2 





35 


12,262 


440 



' Women and voung girls. 



■ Young girls and children over 3 years. 



294 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 4.— TEMPORARY HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and maintained by- 



WrSCONSIN. 
Green Bay: 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Police and Webster avenues. 
St. Mary's Mothers' and Infants' Home and Hos- 
pital. 

403 Webster avenue. 
La Crosse: 

Home for the Friendless 

609 South Eleventh street. 
MOwaukee: 

Downer Home 

7 Prospect avenue. 

House of the Good Shepherd 

Milwaukee Home for the Friendless 

378-380 Van Buren street. 



Sheboygan: 

Sheboygan Home for the Friendle 



Sisters of Our Lady of Charity 

Sisters of Misericorde 

Private corporation 

Presbyterian Church, as trustee o 
the Mrs. Jason Downer endowmen 

Sisters of the Good Shepherd 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private association 

Private corporation 



Special class cared for. 



Homeless women and children. 



Ministers and their wives . 



Wayward girls, and children . . 
Homeless women and children . 



Homeless women and girls . 



Maintenance 
charge per week. 



Homeless and wayward girls .$1.25. . 

1 
Mothers and infants None. 



None. 
None. 



Homeless men None . 



women and girls, and Not fixed, 
homeless, neglected, or abused chil- 
dren. I 



I Women and young girls 



' Girls and children. 



Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 



TEMPORARY HOMES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN. 

ADULTS AND CHILDREN— Continued. 



295 







NUMBER OF INMATES. 




Number 

of paid • 

employees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 
from pay 
inmates, 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On 


January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Men. 


Women. 


Children. 


Men. 


Women. 


CMldren. 


Men. 


Women. 


Children. 










i 

i " 


1145 








'50 


•0 





1160 





3 


SO 


$2,000 


89,000 


441 


7 


19 


27 


139 


205 


114 


' 


26 


43 


' 





498 


9,350 


442 





4 


15 





7 


25 





8 


24 


2 





75 


1,000 


443 


3 


3 





19 


9 







1 





4 








2,800 


444 








279 








2 30 








259 


2 








(') 


445 





3 


2 





156 


70 





5 


3 


2 








1,0.52 


446 





23 







64 


22 





20 


s 


3 





476 


2,533 


447 


130 








2,038 








112 








13 





3,319 


13,647 


448 











2 


7 


19 











' 








600 


449 



3 Not reported. 



296 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 5.— SCHOOLS AND HOMES 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Special class cared for. 


Specific object of 
institution. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 


1 


ALABAMA. 
Talladega: 

Alabama School for the Bhnd 


State of Alabama 


Blind children 


Educational.. 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational. 

Educational 

Educational 

Industrial home.. 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational and 
manual train- 
ing. 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Home and work- 
rooms. 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Permanent home. 
Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 


1882 
1860 
1892 

1860 
1895 

1874 

1816 
1894 

1893 
1871 

1857 
1899 

1885 

1846 
1851 

1884 
1894 

1849 
1839 

1847 
1844 












Alabama School for the Negro Deaf and BUnd . . . 

ARKANSAS. 
Little Rock: 




Negro deaf-mute and blind children . .. 
Deaf-mute children, and deaf-bhnd . . 


4 




5 


A rtfmsaP S^tinol foT the Bh'nrl 


State of Arkansas 




CALIFORNIA. 
Berkeley: 

California Institution for the Deaf and the BUnd. 
Oakland: 

TTirlnafrifll TTnme fnr the Adult. ■Rlind 


State of CaUfomia 


Deaf and blind children 




State of Cahfomia 


Blind (iTid dppf hhnrl arlnlta 




Thirty-sixth street and Telegraph ave- 
nue. 




Deal-mute adults and childre'^ 

Deaf and blind children 


q 


4002 Telegraph avenue. 

COLORADO. 
Colorado Springs: 

Colorado School for the Deaf and the Bhnd 

CONNECTICUT. 
Hartford: 


State of Colorado 










Asylum avenue. 

Connecticut Institute for the Blind , The 

334 Westhersfield avenue. 

Connecticut School and Nursery for the Blind 

1205 Asylum avenue. 
Mystic: 

Mystic Oral School for the Deaf 












13 








DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 

Washington: 

Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb. .. 
(Kendall Green.) 








Aid Association for the Blind 






915 E street NW. 

FLORIDA. 
St. Augustine: 

Florida School for Blind, Deaf, and Dumb 

GEORGIA. 
Cave Springs: 

Georgia School for the Deaf 


Bhnd, deaf, and dumb children 


17 




18 


Macon: 




Bhnd and nearly bUnd children 




745 Orange street. 

ILLINOIS. 
Chicago: 


St. Joseph's Home for the Friendless. 




409 South May street. 




21 


851 Marshall boulevard. 
McCowen Oral School for Young Deaf Children. 
65.50 Yale avenue. 
Jacksonville: 

Illinois Institution for the Education of the 
Bhnd. 




Totally and semi deaf children and 
adults. 














INDIAN TERRITORY. 
Fort Gibson: 

International School for the Blmd and Deaf 

INDIANA. 
Indianapolis: 

Indiana Institution for the Education of the 

Blind. 
Indiana Institution for the Education of the 
Deaf and Dumb. . 








State of Indiana 

















' state subsidy of S300 per year for each beneficiary. 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 

FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 



297 



NUMBER OF INMATES (PUPILS). 



On January 1, 1904. 



I Total. Males. 



Admitted during 1904. 



153 
' State subsidy of S'250 per year for each beneficiary 



Males. Females. 



Remaining Decemlier 31, 1904. 



Males. Females. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 



Income 
from pay 
inmates, 



,322 I 6 
7 



59,752 10 
9,736 I 11 



78,983 14 
5,000 j 15 



m 1 19 

25,500 i 20 
14,000 j 21 

51,921 
114,755 



3,990 
3,864 



Included in St. Joseph's Home for the Friendless. 



298 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



-SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and mamtained by- 



Special class eared ior. 



Year 

Specific object of ! when 
institution. found- 



lOWA. 
Council Bluffs: 

Iowa School for the Deaf. 



KANSAS. 
Kansas City: 

Kansas State School for the Blind . 
Eleventh and State streets. 
Olathe: . 

Kansas School for the Deaf 



KENTUCKY. 
Danville: 

Kentucky School for the Deaf 

Louisville: 

Kentucky Institution for the Blind . 

LOUISIANA. 



Louisiana Institute for the Blind 

Louisiana Institute for the Deaf and Dumb. 



MAINE. 
Portland: 

Maine School for the Deaf . 
79-91 Spring street. 



MARYLAND. 
Baltimore: 

Maryland School for Colored Blind and Deaf. 
649 West Saratoga street. 



MASSACHUSETTS. 
AUston: 

New England Home for Deaf-Mutes . 
273 Cambridge-street. 



New England Industrial School for Deaf-Mutes 
113 Elliott street, 
jioston: 

Boston Nursery for Blind Babies 

66 Fort avenue (Roxbury). 
Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School 
for the Blind. 

553 East Broadway (South Boston). 
Medford: 

Sarah Fuller Home 

93 Wobum street (West Medford). 
Northampton: 

Clarke School for the Deaf ; 

Randolph: 

Boston School for the Deaf 

North Main street. 



I MICHIGAN. 

Fhnt: 
48 Michigan School for the Deaf . 



North Detroit: 

Evangelical Lutheran Institution for the Deaf. 



MINNESOT.\. 
Faribault: 

Minnesota School for the Blind . 



Minnesota School for the Deaf. 



MISSISSIPPI. 
Jackson: 
53 ' Mississippi Institution for the Blind. 



State of Iowa 

State of Iowa 

State of Kansas 

State of Kansas 

State of Kentucky 

State of Kentucky 

State of Louisiana 

State of Louisiana 

Sisters of Notre Dame 

State of Maine 

State of Maryland 

Private corporation 

Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart. . 

State of Maryland 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private corporation 

Private coi-poration 

Private corporation 

Private corporation '. , 

Private corporation 

State of Michigan 

State of Michigan 

German EvangeUcal Lutheran Syn- 
ods of Ohio, Missouri, and other 
states. 

State of Minnesota 

State of Minnesota 

State of Mississippi 

State of Mississippi 

1 Not reported. 



Deaf children . 



Blind children. 
Deaf children . . 



Educational 


.:• 1855 


Educational 


.. 1852 

1 


Educational 


i 
..' 1867 


Educational 


.. 1861 



Deaf-mute adults and childr 
Blind children 



Educational ^ 1823 

Educational 1 1842 



Blind children | Educational . 

Deaf-mute children ! Educational . 



Deaf-mute children . 



1853 
1852 



Educational . 



Blind and deaf children Educational 

Blind children \ Educational 

Deaf-mute children 



1872 
1853 



To educate and to 
provide homes. 



Deaf-mute children '' Educational . 



Aged, blind, and infirm deaf-mutes. 
Deaf-mute children 



Blind children . 
Blind children. 



Permanent home.! 1901 



Educational . 



Deaf children under 5 ye 

Deaf children 

Deaf children 



Deaf children 

Blind cliildren 

Deaf-mute cluldren. 



BUnd children 

Deaf-mute children 



Home "ntil 5 1900 

years of age. 
Educational 1829 



Educational 1867 

Educational 1899 

Educational 1854 

Educational 1880 

Educational 1873 



Educational 1866 

Educational 1863 



Blind children of school age Educational . 

Deaf-mute and deaf-blind children ... Educational . 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 

THE DEAF AND BLIND— Continued. 



299 









NUMBER OF INMATES 


(PUPILS). 








Number 
of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 


Income 

from pay 

Lomates, 

1903. 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On 


January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 




Total. 


Males. 


Females. 


Total. 


Males. 


Females. 


Total. 


Males. 


Females. 






248 


140 


108 


21 


13 




251 


135 


116 


61 




SO 


S52,733 




118 


61 


57 


25 


13 


12 


143 


74 











28,394 
23,128 


28 


101 


50 


51 


14 


6 


8 


89 


43 


46 


37 







29 


223 


111 


112 


211 


99 


112 


211 




112 


55 







24,640 


30 


349 


197 


152 


48 


18 


30 


354 


195 


159 


73 







65,280 


31 


126 


63 


63 




12 


14 


124 


60 


64 


33 







31,456 


32 


SO 


23 


27 


51 


27 


24 


51 




24 


17 







12,000 
21,600 


33 


140 


79 


61 


122 


72 


50 


122 


72 


50 


23 







34 


33 


21 


12 


2 


1 


1 


34 


21 


13 


4 




107 


2,000 


35 


94 


59 


35 


13 




6 


95 


56 




20 




1,600 


18,700 


36 


69 


44 


25 


8 


5 


3 


55 




17 


18 




2,025 


13,036 


37 


97 


43 


54 


7 


4 


3 


92 


42 


50 


29 


21,687 


6,932 


38 


27 


7 


20 


4 





4 


31 


7 


24 


5 


500 


50 


(') 


39 


99 


52 


47 


17 


10 


7 


106 


56 


50 


40 







25,397 
1,347 


40 




3 


4 


1 









3 


5 







31 


41 


2.5 


12 


13 


5 


5 





24 


14 


10 


10 


2,000 





7,108 


42 


18 


10 


8 


12 


4 


8 


15 


6 


9 


7 





368 


4,250 


43 


254 


126 


128 


38 


21 


17 


264 


134 


130 


90 


30,000 


27,561 


69,012 


44 


10 


6 


4 


« 


3 


3 


« 


e 


3 


7 


2,125 


2,000 


4,939 


45 


143 


73 


70 


22 


13 


9 


143 


75 


68 


58 


32,337 


2,712 


55,574 


46 


45 


19 


26 


19 


7 


12 


63 


26 


37 


5 


8,091 





7,030 


47 


m 


212 


176 


43 


21 


22 


346 


185 


161 


106 







89,537 


48 


Z 

34 


61 
20 


54 

14 


121 
4 


2 


55 
2 


113 
30 


60 
21 


53 
9 


42 
8 





1,051 


30,700 
4,048 


49 





50 


85 


47 


38 


91 


48 


43 


91 


48 


43 


30 







22,997 


51 


281 


150 


131 




157 


131 


122 


78 


44 


67 







53,825 


52 


48 


30 


18 


48 


18 


30 


(') 
137 


(1) 


(') 

R8 


13 







12,000 


53 


149 


70 


79 


164 


83 


81 


42 









54 







300 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



-SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by- 


Special class cared for. 


Specific object of 
institution. 


! 

when 
found- 
ed. 




MISSOURI. 
Fulton: 




Deaf and deaf-mute children 


Educational 

Permanent home. 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Permanent home. 
Educational 

Educational 

Education of blind 
childrenbetween 
5 and 21 years. 

Permanent home 
for blind men 
and women. 
To provide home 
and employ- 
To provide sup- 
port and educa- 
tion. 

Educational 

Educational 

To provide a home 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Maintenance and 
education. 

Educational 

Educational 

To provide a home 

Maintenance and 
education. 


1851 
1898 

■ 1851 

1893 
1875 

1890 
1883 

1865 
1896 

1874 
1853 
1884 

1832 
1867 

1817 

1869 

1876 
1875 
1872 
1876 




St. Louis: 


Women's and Young Women's Chris- 
tian Association. 


57 


1214 North Garrison avenue. 
Mariae ConsiliL School lor the Deaf 


Deaf-mute children 

Blind children and adults 


58 


1849 Cass avenue. 
Missouri School for the Blind 






1827 Morgan street. 








Longwood place. 

MONTANA. 
Boulder: 








NEBRASKA. 
Nebraska City: 

Nebraska Institute for the Blind 




Blind children 




Omaha: 

Nebraska Institute for the Deaf and Dumb 

Forty-fifth and Boulevard streets. 

NEW JERSEY. 
Jersey City: 








Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace 






537 Pavonia avenue. 
Trenton: 






HamOton and Chestnut avenues. 

NEW YORK. 
Albany: 

Albany Home School for the Oral Instruction of 
the Deaf. 

98 North Pine avenue. 
Batavia: 


Counties and state of New York 

State of New York 

Church Charity Foundation of Long 
Island. 








67 


Brooklyn: 3 

Church Home for the Blind 


Blind adults 




550 Washington avenue. 




69 


512-520 Gates avenue. 

St. Joseph's Institute for the Improved Instruc- 
tion oi Deaf-Mutes. 

113 Buffalo avenue. 
Buffalo: 

Le Couteulx St. Mary's Institution for the Im- 
proved Instruction of Deaf-Mutes. 
2253 Main street. 
Malone: 

Northern New York Institution for Deaf-AIutes. 
New York: < 


Ladies of the Sacred Heart of Mary . . . 

Le Couteulx St. Mary's Benevolent 
Society. 


















73 


896 Amsterdam avenue. 
New York Institution for the Blind 




Blind, and deaf and blind minors 


74 


412 Nmth avenue. 
New York Institution for the Improved Instmc- 
tion of Deaf-Mutes. 

904-922 Lexington avenue. 
New York Institution for the Instruction of the 
Deaf and Dumb. 

One hundred and sixty-third street and 
Broadway. 
St. Joseph's Institute for the Improved Instruc- 
tion of Deaf-Mutes. 
(Fordham.) 
Rochester: 

Western New York Institution for Deaf-Mutes. . 
945 St. Paul street. 
Rome: 

Central New York Institution for Deaf-Mutes. . . 
Wappingers Falls: 

Gallaudet Home for Aged and Infirm Deaf 

Westchester: 

St. Joseph's Institution for the Improved In- 
struction of Deaf-Mutes. 








Deaf-mute children 


76 


Ladies of the Sacred Heart of Mary . . . 


77 




78 




Deaf-mute adults and children 

Deaf-mute and blind over 60 years. . . 








Ladies of the Sacred Heart of Mary. . . 







2 Closed for repaii-s. 



3 Part of New York city. 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND 

THE DEAF AND BLIND— Continued. 



301 



NUMBER OF INMATES (PUPILS). 



On January 1, 1904. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Remaining December 31, 1904. 



Males. Females. 



Number Amount of 
of paid annual sub- 
em- sidy from 
ployees. public funds. 



Income 

from pay 

inmates, 

1903. 



Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance. 1903. 



49,643 

(5) 



52,539 
35,979 



1 Includes Manhattan and Bronx boroughs only; for data for other boroughs see Brooklyn. 

> Subsidy of S280 per year for each state beneficiary and S300 per year for each county beneflciary. 



SO i 872,000 

2,747 

(1) 

33,773 



(') 


7fi2 

2,045 



34,872 

22,579 
18,220 
59,723 



53,8fi0 
38,525 
7,721 
57,974 



302 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 5.— SCHOOLS AND HOIVIES FOR 



NAME AND LOCATION. 



Supervised and i 



Special class cared lor. 



NORTH CAROLINA. 
Morganton: 

North Carolina School for the Deai and Diimb. 

Raleigh: 

North Carolina Institution for the Education of 
the Deaf and Dumb, and the Blind. 
McDowell and Jones streets. 



NORTH DAKOTA. 

Devils Lake: 

North Dakota Deaf and Dumb Asylum. 



State of North Carolina . 
State of North CaroUna. 



State of North Dakota. 



OHIO. 
Cincinnati; 

Notre Dame School for the Deaf | Sisters of Notre Dame. 

Sycamore and Si.\th streets. | 

Columbus: 

Ohio Institution for the Education of Deaf and | State of Ohio 

Dumb. i 



Ohio State School for the Blind ' State of Ohio 

. Healthy: 
Clovemook Home for the Blind Private coi-poration . 



OKLAHOMA. 
Guthrie : 

Institute for the Deaf and Dumb Territory of Oklahoma. 



OREGON. 
I Salem: 

90 I Oregon Institute for the Blind State of Oregon . 

91 Oregon School for Deaf-Mutes State of Oregon . 



PENNSYLVANIA. 
Doylestown: 

Dome for Aged and Infirm Deaf Pennsylvania Society for the \d- 

vancement of the Deaf. 
Philadelphia: 

Home for Training in Speech of Deaf CliUdren State of Pennsylvania 

before the- are of School Age. ! 

Belmont and Monument avenues. ' 



Pennsylvania Institution for Deaf and Dumb 

(Mt. Airy.) 
Pennsylvania Institution for the Insti-uction of 
the BUnd. 

(Overbrook.) 
Pennsylvania Retreat for Blind Mutes and Aged 
and Infirm BUnd Persons. 
3518 Lancaster avenue. 
Pittsburg: 

Western Pennsylvania Institution for the In- 
struction of the Deaf and Dumb. 
(Edgewood Park.) 
Scranton: 

Pennsylvania Oral School for the Deaf 



Private coi-poration . 
Private corporation . 
Private association . . 



RHODE ISLAND. 
Providence: 

Rhode Island Institute for the Deaf. 
520 Hope street. 



Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 
Private corporation . 



State of Rhode Island. 



SOUTH CAROLINA. 
Cedar Spring: 

South Carolina Institution for the Education of State of South Carolina, 
the Deaf and the Blind. 



SOUTH DAKOTA. 
Gary: 

South Dakota School for the Blind State of South Dakota . 

Sioux Falls: 



South Dakota School for Deaf-Mutes . 



TENNESSEE. 
Knoxville: 

Tennessee Deaf and Dumb School . 
629 Asylum street. 
Nashville: 

Tennessee School lor the Blind 



State of South Dakota. 



State of Tennessee . 



State of Tennessee 

' Not reported. 



White deaf-mutes between 8 and 23 Educational . 
Educational . 



Deaf-mutes between fi and 2.5 years 



Deaf-mute cliildren Educational 



Deaf and deaf- blind children ; Educational 

Blind adults and children Educational 

Blind adults i Industrial home. 



Deaf-mutes under 21 • 



BUnd children. 
Deaf children.. 



Deaf-mutes, a 
adult.s. 


nd 


blind 


deaf-mute 


To provide a per- 
manent home. 

Trainmgin speech 
of deaf children 
under school 
age. 

To provide a per- 
manent home. 

Educational 

Educational 


1902 
1892 


' 














Blind chUdren 








1833 



Educational . 
Educational. 



Deaf-mute children. 



Deaf-mutes between 6 and 21 vears . 



Educational . 



1873 
1870 



Deaf children Educational 



Deaf and lilind chUdr 



Blind between 10 and .30 years 

Deaf-mutes between fi and 21 years. . 



Deaf-mutes between 8 and 2] years. 
Blind between 6 and 21 years 



Educational . 
Educational . 



Educational . 
Educational . 



1845 
1844 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 



303 



THE DEAF AND BLIND— Continued. 









NUMBER OF INMATES 


(PUPILS). 








1 


from pay 

inmates, 

1903 


Total cost 
of mainte- 
nance, 1903. 




On 


January 1, 1904. 


Admitted during 


1904. 


Remaining December 31, 1904. 


of paid 

em- 
ployees. 


sidy from 
public funds. 




Total. 


Males. 


Females, 


Total. 


Males. 


Females. 


Total. 


Males. 


Females. 








242 


127 


115 


28 


16 


12 


241 


126 


115 


50 




» 


840,000 


81 


310 






89 




49 


328 


164 


164 


96 








82 


64 


33 










66 


33 


33 











83 


18 




9 


5 




4 


22 


9 


13 





SO 


Q) 


(1) 


84 


510 

312 


274 
185 


236 
127 


65 
324 


32 


135 


487 
302 


260 
179 


227 


106 








120,279 
50,000 










1 




6 


1 


5 


9 


1 


8 


3 








2,200 


87 


15 


/ 


11 


2 





2 


16 


3 


13 


2 


(') 


1,275 


2,037 


8S 


74 


35 












33 















30 


20 


10 


34 


20 




20 


17 


12 










90 


65 


32 


33 






5 


70 


34 


36 










91 


10 


3 









2 


10 


2 


8 


2 





250 


1,500 


92 


63 


38 


25 


6 


3 


3 


63 


38 


25 


9- 




675 


' 18 928 


PS 







69 







3 


70 





70 


1.5 








6,490 


94 


507 


263 


244 


49 


34 


15 


507 


273 


234 


143 


124,800 


6,749 


144, 623 


95 


182 


97 


85 


56 


28 


28 


201 


104 


97 


90 


49,080 


918 


66,994 


96 


8 


« 














« 


« 














1,731 


97 


229 


114 


115 


30 


13 


17 


219 


113 


106 


60 


.58,a50 





54,861 


98 


84 


38 


46 




2 


4 


84 


" 


45 


- 


19,152 





22,631 


99 


64 


39 


25 




















20,000 


100 


179 


102 


77 


179 


103 


,. 








39 




300 


24,851 


101 


1 *'' 


30 
20 


10 

27 


41 


30 


11 


40 


30 


10 
34 


11 
13 








8,767 
13,675 






103 


246 


126 


120 


237 


125 


112 


234 


124 


110 


40 







39, 600 


104 


220 


101 


119 


294 


142 


152 


217 


102 


115 


55 









105 



304 



BENEVOLENT INSTITUTIONS. 



Table 5.— SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR 





NAME AND LOCATION. 


Supervised and maintained by— 


Special class cared for. 


Specific object of 
institution. 


Year 
when 
found- 
ed. 




TEXAS. 
Austin; 

Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute for Colored 
Youths. 




Deaf, dumb, and blind between 7 and 
21 years. 

Blind between 7 and 21 years 

Deaf, and blind-deaf children 

Deaf and blind between 5 and 30 years. 
Deaf and blind between 8 and 2] years. 

Deaf-mute and blind children 

Deaf and blind children 


Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Educational 

Education and 


1887 

1856 
18.57 

1884 
1839 

1886 

1870 

1§52 
1849 
1876 






108 








South Congress avenue. 

UTAH. 
Ogden: 

Utah State School for the Deaf, Dumb, and 
Blind. 

VIRGINIA. 
Staunton : 

Vu-ginia School for the Deaf and the Blind 

WASHINGTON. 
Vancouver: 




110 


State of Virginia 


ll"' 


WEST VIRGINIA. 
Romnev: 

West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind 

WISCONSIN. 
Delavan: 

Wisconsin School for the Deaf 


State of West Virginia 

State of Wisconsin 


lis 


Deaf, and blind-deaf children and 
a,dults. 

Blind children 


114 


Janesville: 

Wisconsm School for the Blind 


State of Wisconsin 




St. Francis: 


Sisters of the Third Order of St. 
Francis. 


Deaf-mute children and youth '. . 







i 



SCHOOLS AND HOMES FOR THE DEAF AND BLIND. 

THE DEAF AND BLIND— Continued. 



305 



NUMBER OF INMATES (PUPILS). 



On January 1, 1904. 



Males. I Females. 



Admitted during 1904. 



Males. Females. 



Eemaiuing December 31, 1904. 



Males. Females. 



Number 
of paid 



Amount of 
annual sub- 
sidy from 
public funds. 



mmates, "J ,„^, 



16, .500 
77,010 



30952—05 20 



1 



INDEX 



CLASSES OF INSTITUTIONS, BY STATES AND TERRITORIES. 



Orphanages, children's homes, and nurseries: P'^ee. 

Alabama 56, 57 

Arkansas 56, 57 

California 56-59 

Colorado 58-61 

Connecticut 60, 61 

Delaware 62, 63 

District of Columbia 62, 63 

Florida 62, 63 

Georgia 62-65 

Illinois 64-69 

Indian Territory 68, 69 

Indiana ." 68-73 

Iowa 72,73 

Kansas 72, 73 

Kentucky 72-75 

Louisiana 74-77 

Maine 76, 77 

Maryland 76-79 

Massachusetts 78-83 

Michigan 82-85 

Minnesota 84-87 

Mississippi 86, 87 

Missouri 86-89 

Montana 88,89 

Nebraska 88, 89 

Nevada 88, 89 

New Hampshire 88-91 

New Jersey 90-93 

New Mexico 94, 95 

New York 94-105 

North Carolina 104-107 

North Dakota 106, 107 

Ohio 106-113 

Oklahoma 112, 113 

Oregon 112, 113 

Pennsylvania 112-121 

Rhode Island 120, 121 

South Carolina 120, 121 

South Dakota 120, 121 

Tennessee 120-123 

Texas 122, 123 

Utah 124,125 

Vermont 124, 125 

Virginia 124,125 

Washington 126, 127 

West Virginia 126, 127 

Wisconsin 126, 127 

Hospitals and dispensaries: 

Alabama 128, 129 

Arizona 128, 129 

Arkansas 128, 129 

California 128-133 

Colorado 132-135 

Connecticut 134-137 

Delaware 136, 137 

District of Columbia 136, 137 

Florida 136-139 

Georgia 138, 139 

Idaho 138, 139 

Illinois - 138-145 

Indian Territory 144, 145 

Indiana 146, 147 

Iowa 148-151 

Kansas 150, 151 



Hospitals and dispensaries — Continued. Page. 

Kentucky 150-153 

Louisiana 152, 153 

Maine 154, 155 

Maryland 154-157 

Massachusetts 156-163 

Michigan 162-167 

Minnesota 166-169 

Mississippi 168, 169 

Missouri 168-173 

Montana 172, 173 

Nebraska 172-175 

New Hampshire 174, 175 

New Jersey 174-179 

New Mexico 178, 179 

New York 178-193 

North Carolina 192, 193 

North Dakota 192, 193 

Ohio 192-199 

Oklahoma 198, 199 

Oregon 198, 199 

Pennsylvania 198-207 

Rhode Island 206-209 

South Carolina 208, 209 

South Dakota 208, 209 

Tennessee 208, 209 

Texas 210, 211 

Utah 210-213 

Vermont 212, 213 

Virginia 212-215 

Washington 214, 215 

West Virginia 214-217 

Wisconsin 216-219 

Wyoming 218, 219 

Permanent homes for adults, or adults and children: 

Alabama 220, 221 

Arkansas 220, 221 

California 220-223 

Colorado 222, 223 

Connecticut 222, 223 

Delaware 222-225 

District of Columbia 224, 225 

Florida 224, 225 

Georgia 224, 225 

Idaho 226, 227 

Illinois 226-229 

Indian Territory 228, 229 

Indiana 228, 229 

Iowa 228-231 

Kansas 230, 231 

Kentucky 230, 231 

Louisiana 232, 233 

Maine 232, 233 

Maryland 232-235 

Massachusetts 234-239 

Michigan 238, 239 

Minnesota 240, 241 

Mississippi 240, 241 

Missouri 240, 241 

Montana 242, 243 

Nebraska 242, 243 

New Hampshire 242, 243 

New Jersey 242-245 

New York 244-251 

North Carolina 252, 253 

(307) 



308 



INDEX. 



Permanent homes for adults, or adults and children — Con. Page. 

North Dakota 252, 253 

Ohio 252-255 

Oregon 254,255 

Pennsylvania 254-259 

Rhode Island 260, 261 

South Carolina 260, 261 

South Dakota 260, 261 

Tennessee 260,261 

Texas 260-263 

Vermont J 262, 263 

Virginia 262, 263 

Washington 262-265 

West Virginia 264, 265 

Wisconsin 264, 265 

■ Wyoming 264,265 

Temporary homes for adults and children: 

Alabama 266, 267 

Arizona 266, 267 

Arkansas 266, 267 

California. 266, 267 

Colorado 266,267 

Connecticut 266-269 

Delaware 268, 269 

District of Columbia 268, 269 

Florida 268,269 

Georgia 268, 269 

Illinois 268-271 

Indiana 270, 271 

Iowa 270-273 

Kansas 272, 273 

Kentucky 272, 273 

Louisiana 272, 273 

Maine 272, 273 

Maryland 274,275 

Massachusetts 274-277 

Michigan 276,277 

Minnesota 276-279 

Mississippi 278, 279 

Missouri 278, 279 

Montana 278, 279 

Nebraska 278,279 

New Hampshire - 278, 279 

New Jersey 280, 281 

New York 280-285 

North Carolina. 284, 285 

North Dakota 286, 287 

Ohio 286, 287 

Oklahoma 286, 287 

Oregon 286-289 

Pennsylvania 288-291 

Rhode Island 290, 291 

South Carolina 290, 291 



Temporary homes for adults and children — Continued. Page. 

Tennessee 290, 291 

Texas 292,293 

Utah 292, 293 

Vermont 292, 293 

Virginia 292, 293 

Washington 292, 293 

West Virginia 292, 293 

Wisconsin , 294, 295 

Schools and homes for the deaf and blind: 

Alabama 296, 297 

Arkansas 296, 297 

California 296, 297 

Colorado 296, 297 

Connecticut 296, 297 

District of Columbia 296, 297 

Florida 296, 297 

Georgia 296, 297 

Illinois 296, 297 

Indian Territory 296, 297 

Indiana 296, 297 

Iowa 298, 299 

Kansas 298, 299 

Kentucky 298, 299 

Louisiana 298, 299 

Maine 298, 299 

Maryland 298, 299 

Massachusetts 298, 299 

Michigan 298, 299 

Minnesota . 298,299 

Mississippi 298, 299 

Missouri 300, 301 

Montana 300, 301 

Nebraska , 300, 301 

New Jersey 300, 301 

New York 300, 301 

North Carolina 302, 303 

North Dakota 302, 303 

Ohio 302, 303 

Oklahoma 302, 303 

Oregon 302, 303 

Pennsylvania 302, 303 

Rhode Island 302, 303 

South Carolina. 302, 303 

South Dakota 302, 303 

Tennessee 302, 303 

Texas 304,305 

Utah 304, 305 

Virginia 304, 305 

Washington 304, 305 

West Virginia 304, 305 

Wisconsin 304,305 



ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF ALL INSTITUTIONS. 



Page. 

Aberdeen General Hospital, Aberdeen, Wash 214 

Abington Friends' Home, Norristown, Pa 256 

Abraham's Home, Savannah, Ga 224 

Actors' Fund Home, West New Brighton, N. Y 250 

Adams' Nervine Asylnm , F.nston, Mass 156 

Addison (iil I (cri llM-iiital. ( lloucester, Mass 158 

Adeline ^]. Smiih I m.|ii-i ii:il Home, Little Rock, Ark 266 

Adrian Huripitul, ranx^ut;iwnev. Pa 204 

Agard Deaconess Rest Home, Lake Bluff, 111 270 

Agatha Hospital, Clinton, Iowa 148 

Aged Christian Ministers' Home, Castile, N. Y 246 

Aged Colored Women's Home, Williamsport, Pa 258 

Aged Germans' Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Aged Germans' Home, Cleveland, Ohio 252 

Aged Germans' Home, Columbus, Ohio 252 

Aged Men and Women's Home, Baltimore, Md 232 

Aged Persons' Home and Orphan Asylum, Honey Creek, 

Ind 228 

Aged Woman's Home, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Aged Woman's Home, Washington, D. C 224 

Aged Woman's Home of Montgomery Countv, Norristown, 

Pa :.-...; : 256 

Aged Women's and Aged Men's Home, Baltimore, Md 232 

Agency Hospital, Fort Yates, N. Dak : 192 

Agnes Memorial Sanatorium, Montclair, Colo 134 

Aisquith Home, Baltimore, Md 274 

Alabama Methodist Orphanage, Summerfield, Ala 56 



Page 

Alabama School for the Blind, Talladega, Ala 296 

Alabama School for the Deaf, Talladega, Ala 296 

Alabama School for the Negro Deaf and Blind, Talladega, 

Ala 296 

Alameda County King's Daughters' Home, Oakland, Cal. . . 220 

Alameda County Receiving Hospital, Oakland, Cal 130 

Albany City Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary, Albany, 

N. Y 178 

Albany City Tract and Missionary Society Free Night Dis- 
pensary (Rensselaer sti'eet), Albany, N. Y 178 

Albany City Tract and Missionary Society Free Night Dis- 
pensary (Second street), Albany, N. Y 178 

Albany County Hospital, Laramie, Wyo 218 

Albany Free Dispensary (South End district), Albany, N.Y. 178 
Albany Guardian Society and Home for the Friendless, 

Albany, N. Y 244 

Albany Home School for the Oral Instruction of the Deaf, 

A 1 1 .any, N. Y 300 

All.anv ilosi.ital, Albany, N. Y 178 

A 1 1 )a 1 1 \' 1 1 ( IS) lital for Incurables, Albany, N. Y 178 

Ali.niiv oipliau Asylum, Albany, N. Y 94 

Ah'xainlcr llnnie, Charlotte, N. C 106 

Alrxamhia Hospital, Alexandria, Va 212 

Alcxiau i:ruther.s' Hospital, The, Chicago, 111 140 

Alexian Brothers' Hospilal, l^lizabrth, N. J 176 

Alexian Brothers' Hospllal. S(. Louis, Mo 170 

Alice Hospital, Walkervilhs .^I.mt 172 



INDEX. 



309 



Page. 

Alicia Hospital, St. Augustine, Fla 138 

All Saints' Home and St. Paul's Training School, Verbank, 

N. Y 250 

All Saints' Hospital, South McAlester, Ind. T 144 

All Saints' Training School for Girls, Baltimore, Md 76 

All Souls' Hospital, Mori'istown, N.J 176 

Allegheny General Hospital, Allegheny, Pa 198 

Allen County Children's Home, Lima, Ohio 110 

Allen County Orphans' Home, Fort Wayne, Ind 68 

Allen Industrial Home and School, Asheville, N. C 284 

Allendale Farm, Lake Villa, 111 66 

Allentown Hospital, AUentown, Pa 198 

Alliance Hospital, Alliance, Ohio 192 

Allmand Home, Norfolk, Va 262 

Almira Home for Aged Women, Newcastle, Pa 256 

Alpha Home, Indianapolis, Ind 228 

Alton Woman's Home, Alton, 111 226 

Altoona Hospital, Altoona, Pa 198 

Amanda Smith Industrial Orphan Home, Harvej^, 111 66 

Amasa Hospital, Amasa, Mich 162 

American Fuel Company Hospital, Gibson, N. Mex 178 

American Home Finding Association Home, Chicago, 111. . . 268 
American Medical Missionary College Dispensary, Chicago, 

111 140 

American School for the Deaf, Hartford, Conn 296 

Amesbury and Salisbury Home for Aged Women, Amesbury, 

■ Mass - 234 

Amsterdam Hospital, Amsterdam, N. Y 178 

Anamosa Sanitarium, Anamosa, Iowa 148 

Anchorage, The, Elmira, N. Y 282 

Angel Guardian Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 64 

Ann C. Witmer Home, Lancaster, Pa 256 

Anna B. Cunningham Mission Home, Dallas, Tex 292 

Anna B. Milliken Home and Macon County Industrial School 

forGirls, Decatur, 111 226 

Anna Brown Home for the Aged, Quincy, 111 226 

Anna Jaques Hospital, Newburyport, Mass 160 

Annapolis Female Orphan Asylum, Annapolis, Md 76 

Annunciation Orphan Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Anson Dodge Home, St. Simons Mills, Ga 64 

Antonio Hospital, Kenton, Ohio 196 

Appleton Church Home, Macon, Ga 64 

Arkansas Baptist Orphans' Home, Monticello, Ark 56 

Arkansas Deaf-Mute Institute, Little Rock, Ark 296 

Arkansas Methodist Orphanage, Little Rock, Ark 56 

Arkansas School for the Blind, Little Rock, Ark 296 

Armitage Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Armitage Orphanage, The, San Mateo, Cal 58 

Army and Navy General Hospital, Hot Springs, Ark 128 

Arnold Home for the Aged, Detroit, Mich 238 

Arnold Hospital for Incurables, Detroit, Mich 162 

Arnot-Ogden Memorial Hospital, Elmira, N. Y 182 

Arthur Home, Summit, N. J 92 

Asbury and Rebecca Deaconess Hospital, Minneapolis, 

Minn 166 

Ashley Dispensary, Ashley, Ind 146 

Ashley River Asylum, Charleston, S. C 260 

Ashtabula General Hospital, Ashtabula, Ohio 194 

Assembly Home and School, Fredericksburg, Va 124 

Associate Reformed Presbyterian Orphanage, Hickory, S. C. 120 

Association Health Farm, Denver, Colo 1 266 

Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys, New Orleans, La 74 

Asylum of Our Lady of Refuge, Buffalo, N. Y 282 

Asylum of St. Vincent de Paul, New York, N. Y 98 

Asylum of the Sisters of St. Dominic, Blauvelt, N. Y. 94 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Hospital, Ottawa, Kans 150 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Hospital, Topeka, Kans 150 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Hospital, Fort Madi- 
son, Iowa 148 

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway' Hospital, La Junta, 

Colo 134 

Athens County Children's Home, Athens, Ohio 106 

Atlantic City Hospital, Atlantic City, N. J 174 

Atlantic Coast Line Hospital, Rocky Mount, N. C 192 

Atlantic Coast Line Relief Department Hospital, Waycross, 

Ga 138 

Atlantic Hospital, Atlantic, Iowa 148 

Auburn City Hospital, Auburn, N. Y 178 

Auburn Emergency Hospital, Auburn, Me 1 54 

Auburn Home for Aged Women, Auburn, Me 232 

Auburn Home for the Friendless, Auburn, N. Y 280 

Auburn Orphan Asylum, Auburn, N. Y 94 

Augsburg Home for Orphans and the Aged, Baltimore, Md. 232 

Augusta City Hospital, Augusta, Ga 138 



Page. 

Augusta City Hospital, Augusta, Me 154 

Augusta Orphan Asylum, Augusta, Ga 62 

Augustana Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Aultman Home for Aged Women, Canton, Ohio 252 

Aultman Hospital, Canton, Ohio 194 

Aurelia Osborn Fox Memorial Hospital, Oneonta, N. Y 188 

Aurora Hospital, Aurora, 111 188 

Austin Sanitarium, Austin, Tex 210 

Auxiliary Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

Avon Home, Cambridge, Mass 80 

Ayer Home for Young Women and Children, Lowell, Mass . 276 

Babies' Hospital, Newark, N. J 176 

Babies' Hospital of the City of New York, New York, N. Y. 184 

Baby Home, Portland, Oreg 112 

Baldwin Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 114 

Ballon Home for the Aged, Woonsocket, R. I 260 

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Hospital, Brunswick, Md 156 

Baltimore City Hospital and Dispensary, Baltimore, Md 154 

Baltimore Day Nursery, Baltimore, Md 76 

Baltimore Eastern Dispensary, Baltimore, Md 154 

Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat Charity Hospital, Balti- 
more, Md 154 

Baltimore Eye, Ear, and Throat Charity Hospital Dispen- 
sary, Baltimore, Md ." 154 

Baltimore General Dispensary, Baltimore, Md 154 

Baltimore Manual Labor School, Baltimore Md 76 

Baltimore Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md 76 

Baltimore Southern Dispensary, Baltimore, Md 154 

Baltimore University Hospital, Baltimore, Md 154 

Bangor Children's Home, Bangor, Me 76 

Baptist Home, Cambridge, Mass 234 

Baptist Home, New York, N. Y 248 

Baptist Home, Washington, D. C 224 

Baptist Home for Aged Women, Richmond, Va 262 

Baptist Home for Children of Missionaries, Newton, Mass. . 82 

Baptist Home for the Aged, Newark, N. J 244 

Baptist Home of Brooklyn, Brooklyn, N. Y 244 

Baptist Home of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Baptist Ministers' Home, Fenton, Mich 238 

Baptist Ministers' Home, New York, N. Y 248 

Baptist Missionary Children's Home of the Pacific Coast, 

Burton, Wash 126 

Baptist Orphanage of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa 114 

Baptist Orphanage of Virginia, Salem, Va 124 

Baptist Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo 86 

Baroness Erlanger Hospital, Chattanooga, Tenn 208 

Barry Hospital, Hot Springs, Ark 128 

Batavia Hospital, Batavia, N. Y 178 

Bath Military and Naval Orphan Asylum, Bath, Me 76 

Battle Creek Sanitarium, Little Rock, Ark 1 28 

Battles Home for Aged Men, Lowell, Mass 236 

Bayland Orphans' Home, Houston, i'ex 122 

Bayonne Hospital and Dispensary, Bayonne, N. J 174 

Beachonian Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

Beacon Light Mission, Bradford, Pa 114 

Beaver County General Hospital, Rochester, Pa 206 

Beaver Valley General Hospital, New Brighton, Pa 200 

Bedford Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Bedford Dispensary and Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Bell Haven Orphans' Home, Luling, Tex . l 122 

Bell Home, Washington, D. C 62 

Belle Bryan Day Nursery, Richmond, Va 124 

Belle Lenox Nurserv, Denver, Colo 58 

Belle Point Hospital, Fort Smith, Ark 128 

Bellefonte Hospital, Bellefonte, Pa 198 

Bellevue Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

Belmont County Children's Home, Tacoma, Ohio 110 

Belt Mountain Miners' Union Hospital, Neihart, Mont 172 

Benedict Home, Des Moines, Iowa 270 

Benevolent Home, The, Mobile, Ala 220 

B. P. 0. Elks National Home, Bedford City, Va 262 

Benjamin Hershey Memorial Hospital, Muscatine, Iowa . . . 148 

Benoth Israel Sheltering Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Berachah Home, St. Louis, Mo. 278 

Berachah Industrial Home, Arlington, Tex 292 

Bergen County Children's Home, Hackensack, N. J 90 

Berkshire County Home for Aged AVomen, Pittsfleld, Mass. 236 

Bertram Home for Aged Men, Salem, Mass 236 

Beth Adriel, San Jose, Cal 266 

Beth Israel Hospital and Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

Bethany Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Bethany Deaconess Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Bethany Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 200 



310 



INDEX. 



Page. 

Bethany Home, Boydton, Va 124 

Bethany Home, Glendale, Ohio 110 

Bethany Home, Minneapolis, Minn 276 

Bethany Home, Ossining, N. Y 250 

Bethany Home for Friendless Children, Bonair, Va 124 

Bethany Home of Rhode Island, Providence, R. I 290 

Bethany Hospital, Kansas City, Kans 150 

Bethany Orphans' Home, Waupaca, Wis 126 

Bethany Orphans' Home, Womelsdorf , Pa 120 

Bethany Protective Association, Rock Island. Ill 68 

Bethel Home, Onarga, 111 68 

Bethel Rescue Home, Duluth, Minn 276 

Bethel Social Settlement Day Nursery, Minneapolis, Minn. . 84 

Bethesda Children's Christian Home, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Bethesda Foundling Home, St. Louis, Mo 86 

Bethesda Home, Pittsburg. Pa 290 

Bethesda Home, Troy, N. Y 284 

Bethesda Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Bethesda Hospital, Crookston, Minn 166 

Bethesda Hospital, Goessel, Kans 150 

Bethesda Hospital, St. Paul, Minn 168 

Bethesda Hospital and Home for Incurables, St. Louis, Mo. 240 

Bethesda Maternity Hosjiital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Bethesda Old Ladies' Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Bethesda Orphanage, Beresford, S. Dak 120 

Bethesda Orphans' Home, Savannah, Ga 64 

Bethlehem Creche, Chicago, 111 64 

Bethlehem Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Bethlehem Orphan and Half Orphan Asylum, Brooklvn, 

NY "... 94 

Beulah Home, Allegheny, Pa 288 

Beulah Land Farm for Boys, Bay Springs, Mich 84 

Beulah Maternity Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Beulah Orphanage, The, Mills College, Cal 56 

Beulah Rescue Home, Mills College, Cal 266 

Beverly Hospital, Beverly, Mass 156 

Binghamton City Hospital, Binghamton, N. Y 180 

Bishop Bowman Home, Lancaster, Pa 288 

Bishop Clarkson Memorial Hospital for Children, 0?Baha, 

Nebr 174 

Biwabik Hospital, Biwabik, Minn 166 

Blair County Industrial Training Home, Williamsburg, Pa. . 118 

Blessing Hospital, Quincy, 111 144 

Blind Girls' Home, St. Louis, Mo 300 

Bloomingda«le CUnic, New York, N. Y 184 

Bloomingdale Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Blouiat County Industrial Home, Mary ville, Tenn 122 

Blue Cross Medical Aid Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 200 

Bobb's Free Dispensary, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

Bodmann German Widows' Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Boone County Orphans' Home, Lebanon, Ind 70 

Borgess Hospital, Kalamazoo, Mich 164 

Boston Asylum and Farm School for Indigent Boys, Boston, 

Mass 78 

Boston Children's Friend Society, Boston, Mass 78 

Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Boston Dispensary, Boston, Mass 156 

Boston Female Asylum, Boston, Mass 78 

Boston Floating Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Boston Florence Crittenton Home, Waterto wn. Mass 276 

Boston Home for Incurables, Boston, Mass 234 

Boston Industrial Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Boston Lying-in Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Boston North End Mission Home for Young Women, Bos- 
ton, Mass 274 

Boston Nursery for Blind Babies, Boston, Mass 298 

Boston School for the Deaf, Randolph, Mass 298 

Bowery Branch of the Young Men's Christian Association, 

New York, N. Y 282 

Boys and Girls' Home, Sioux City, Iowa 72 

Boys and Girls' Home School, San Francisco, Cal 58 

Boys' Home of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 106 

Boys' Home Society of Baltimore, The, Baltimore, Md 76 

Boys' Industrial Home, Williamsport, Pa 118 

Boys' Industrial Home of Western Pennsylvania, Oakdale, 

Pa 114 

Boys' Industrial School and Orphanage, Nazareth, N. C . . . 106 

Boys' Lodging House, Albany, N. Y 280 

Brace Memorial Farm School, Valhalla, N. Y 104 

Bradford Hospital, Bradford, Pa 198 

Bradford Street Emergency Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Bradley Home, Peoria 111 226 

Brattleboro Memorial Hospital, Brattleboro, Vt 212 

Breslin Home, Waterford, N. Y 250 



Page. 

Brethren' s Dispensary, Chicago, 111 140 

Brethren's Home, Greenville, Ohio 252 

Bridgeport Hospital, The, Bridgeport, Conn 134 

Bridgeport Protestant Orphan Asylum, Bridgeport, Conn .. 60 

Bridgeton Hospital, Bridgetou, N. J 174 

Brigham Hospital and North End Dispensary, Boston, Mass. 156 

Brightlook Hospital, St. Johnsbury, Vt 212 

Brightside Dav Nurserv, New York, N. Y 98 

Bristol Home for Destitute Children, Bristol, R. 1 120 

Broadway Infirmary, Louisville, Ky 152 

Brockton Day Nursery, Brockton, Mass 80 

Brockton Hospital, Brockton, Mass 158 

Brokaw Hospital, Bloomington, 111 140 

Broken Bow City Hospital, Broken Bow, Nebr 172 

Brookline Board of Health Hospital, Brookline, Mass 158 

Brookline Day Nur.sery, Brookline, Mass 80 

Brooklyn Central Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Brooklyn Children's Aid Society, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Brooklyn City Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Brooklyn Eastern District Dispensary and Hospital, Brook- 
lyn, N. Y... 180 

Brooklyn Eye and Ear Hospital and Dispensary, Brooklyn, 

N. Y "... 180 

Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Brooklyn Home for Aged Colored People, Brooklyn, N. Y. 244 

Brooklyn Home for Aged Men, Brooklyn, N. Y 244 

Brooklyn Home for Consumptives, Brooklyn, N. Y 244 

Brooklyn Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Brooklyn Howard Colored Orphan Asylum, Brooklyn, N. Y. 94 
Brooklyn Industrial Home for Destitute Children, Brook- 
lyn, N. Y 94 

Brooklyn Methodist Episcopal Church Home, Brooklyn, 

NY 244 

Brooklyn Nursery and Infants' Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.. 280 

Brooklyn Society Home Shelter, Brooklyn, N. Y _ . 94 

Brooklyn Training School and Home for Young Girls, 

Brooklyn, N. Y 280 

Brooks Memorial Hospital, Dunkirk, N. Y 182 

Brown County Children's Home, Georgetown, Ohio 110 

Bruen Home, Washington, D. C 268 

Brunswick Home, Amityville, Long Island, N. Y 244 

Bry n Mawr Hospital, Bry n Mawr, Pa 198 

Bryson Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Buckingham Industrial School, Buckeystown, Md 78 

Buckner Orphans' Home, Dallas, Tex 260 

Buffalo Eye and Ear Infirmary, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Buffalo Homeopathic Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Buffalo Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Buffalo Orphan Asylum, Buffalo, N. Y 96 

Buffalo Woman's Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Burbank Hospital, Fitchburg, Mass 158 

Burd Orphan Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Burlington County Children's Home, Mt. Holly, N.J 90 

Burlington County Hospital, Mt. Holly, N. J 176 

Burlington Hospital, Burlington, Iowa 148 

Burnap Free Home for Aged Women, Boston, Mass 234 

Bushwick and East Brooklyn Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y. . 180 

Bushwick Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Butler County General Hospital, Butler, Pa 198 

Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich 164 

Cairo Children's Home, Cairo, 111 64 

California Girls' Training Home, Alameda, Cal 266 

California Institution for the Deaf and the Blind, Berkelev, 

Cal :. 296 

California Woman's Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Calumet and Arizona Hospital,, Bisbee, Ariz 128 

Calumet and Hecla Dispensary, Lake Linden, Mich 164 

Calumet and Hecla Mining Company Hospital, Calumet, 

Mich 162 

Calvary Industrial Home, New Haven, Conn 268 

Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church Dispensary, New York, 

NY 184 

Cambria Fuel Company's Hospital, Cambria, Wyo 218 

Cambria Hospital, Johnstown, Pa 200 

Cambridge Home for Aged People, Cambridge, Mass _ 234 

Cambridge Hospital, Cambridge, Mass 158 

Cambridge Hospital, Cambridge, Ohio 194 

Cambridge-Maryland Hospital, Cambridge, Md 156 

Camden City Dispensary, Camden, N. J 176 

Camden Day Nursery, Camden, N.J 90 

Camden Home for Friendless Children, Camden, N. J 90 

Camden Municipal Hospital, Camden, N. J 176 



INDEX. 



3U 



Page. 

Campbell County ProtestantChildren'sHome, Newport, Ky. 74 

Carbon County Hospital, Red Lodge, Mont 172 

Carbondale Emergency Hospital, Carbondale, Pa ■ 198 

Carleton Home, Georgetown, Mass 236 

Carney Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Caroline Wilkinson Home, Charleston, S. C 260 

Cass County Orphans' Home, Logansport, Ind 70 

Catharine Mission Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Catharine Mission Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

Cathedral Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Catherine Kennedy Home, Wilmington, N. C 252 

Catherine Morrison Home, Auburn, Me 272 

Catholic Home for Destitute Children, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Catholic Orphan Asylum, Minneapolis, Minn 84 

Catholic Protectory, Buffalo, N. Y" 96 

Cayuga Asylum for Destitute Children, Auburn, N. Y 94 

Centenary Hospital, St. Louis, Mo ■ 170 

Centerville Public Hospital, Centerville, Iowa 148 

Central Baptist Orphanage, May wood. 111 68 

Central Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Central Dispensary and Emergency Hospital, Washington, 

D. C ." - 136 

Central Emergency Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Central Free Dispensary, Chicago, 111 140 

Central Homeopathic Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Central Maine General Hospital, Lewiston, Me 154 

Central New York Institution for Deaf-Mutes, Eome, N. Y. 300 

Central Union Mission, Washington, D. C 268 

Central Wesleyan Orphan Asylum, Warrenton, Mo 88 

Centro Asturiano Sanatorium, Tampa, Fla 138 

Champaign County Children's Home, Urbana, Ohio 112 

Champion Iron Company's Hospital, Beacon, Mich 162 

Channing Home, Boston, Mass 234 

Channing Hospital, Providence, R. I 206 

Chapin Home for the Aged and Infirm, New York, N. Y. . . 248 

Charity Eye, Ear, and Throat Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Charity Hospital (colored), Savannah, Ga 138 

Charity Hospital IDispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 200 

Charity Hospital of Louisiana, New Orleans, La 152 

Charity Hospital of Montgomery County, Norristown, Pa . . 200 

Charity Hospital of Pittsburg, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Charity Rotch School, Massillon, Ohio 110 

Charles S. Gray Deaconess Hospital, Ironton, Ohio 196 

Charleston General Hospital, Charleston, W. Va 214 

Charlestown Free Dispensary and Hospital, Boston, Mass . . 156 

Charlotte Day Nursery, Charlotte, N, C 106 

Charlton Industrial Farm School, Charlton, N. Y 96 

Chase Home, Annapolis, Md 232 

Chase Home for Children, Portsmouth, N. H 90 

Chelsea Day Nursery and Children's Home, Chelsea, Mass . 80 

Chenango Valley Home, Norwich, N. Y 248 

Cherokee Orphan Asylum, Tahlequah, Ind. T 68 

Cherry Tree Home, Spring Valley, N. Y 104 

Chesapeake and Ohio Hospital, Clifton Forge, Va. 212 

Chesapeakeand Ohio Railroad Hospital, Huntington, W^. Va. 216 

Chester County Hospital, West Chester, Pa 206 

Chester Hospital, Chester, Pa 198 

Cheyenne River Agency and School Hospital, Chevenne 

Agency, S. Dak ." 208 

Chicago Baptist Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Charity Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Clinical School Free Dispensary, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Foundling Home, Chicago, 111 268 

Chicago Home for Convalescent Women and Children, 

Chicago, 111 270 

Chicago Home for Incurables, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Home for Jewish Orphans, Chicago, 111 64 

Chicago Home for the Friendless, Chicago, 111 270 

Chicago Homeopathic Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Industrial Home for Children, Woodstock, 111 68 

Chicago Industrial School for Girls, Chicago, 111 64 

. Chicago Isolation Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Lying-in Hospital and Dispensarj^, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Maternity Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Municipal Lodging House, Chicago, 111 270 

Chicago Nursery and Half Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 64 

Chicago Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 64 

Chicago Policlinic Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Union Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Chicago Wabash Dispensary, Chicago, 111 140 

Child Saving Institute, Omaha, Nebr 88 

Children's Aid and Home Finding Association of Utah, 

Salt Lake City, Utah 124 

Children's Aid and Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to 

Children. Newark, N.J. 92 



Page. 

Children's Aid Society Hospital, Chambersburg, Pa 198 

Children's Charitable Home and School, Grand Junction, 

Mich 84 

Children's Day Home and Nursery (North Ohio avenue), 

Columbus, Ohio 108 

Children's Day Home and Nursery (Oak street), Columbus, 

Ohio '. 108 

Children's Day Nursery, Trenton, N.J 92 

Children's Free Hospital, Detroit, Mich 162 

Children's Free Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

Children's Home, Amsterdam, N. Y 94 

Children's Home, Ashland, Ohio 106 

Children's Home, Ashtabula, Ohio 106 

Children's Home, Austin, Tex 122 

Children's Home, Baltimore, Md 76 

Children's Home (Columbus avenue and Johnson street), 

Bay Citv, Mich 82 

Children's Home (Tenth street). Bay City, Mich 84 

Children's Home, Duluth, Minn 84 

Children's Home, Fort Smith, Ark 56 

Children's Home, Grand Rapids, Mich 84 

Children's Home, Hamilton, Ohio 110 

Children's Home, Jersey City, N. J 90 

Children's Home, Kansas City, Kans 72 

Children's Home, Lawrence, Mass 82 

Children's Home, Lexington, Ky 74 

Children's Home, Little Rock, Ark 56 

Children's Home, Lowell, Mass 82 

Children's Home, Middletown, N. Y 98 

Children's Home, Mineola, Long Island, N. Y 98 

Children's Home, Montclair, N. J 90 

Children's Home, The, New Britain, Conn 60 

Children's Home, Newburg, N. Y 102 

Children's Home, Norwalk. Ohio 110 

Children's Home, Ogdensburg, N. Y . 102 

Children's Home, Plainfield, N. J 92 

Children's Home, Portland, Oreg 112 

Children's Home, Schenectady, N. Y 104 

Children's Home, Seattle, Wash 126 

Children's Home, South Bethlehem, Pa 118 

Children's Home, Stockton, Cal 58 

Children's Home, Tabor, Iowa 72 

Children's Home, Tampa, Fla 62 

Children's Home, York, Pa 120 

Children's Home and Orphan Asylum, Rahway, N. J 92 

Children's Home of Buncombe County, Asheville, N. C 104 

Children's Home of Buncombe County (colored), Asheville, 

N. C - 104 

Children's Home of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 106 

Children's Home of Delaware, Delaware, Ohio 108 

Children's Home of Fall River, Fall River, Mass 80 

Children's Home of the City of Wheeling, AVheeling, W. Va. 126 
Children's Home of the Protestant Episcopal Church, New 

Orleans, La 74 

Children's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 200 

Children's Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Children's Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Children's Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Children's Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa ..... 202 
Children's Hospital of the Marv J. Drexel Home, Philadel- 
phia, Pa ■ 202 

Children's House, Boston, Mass 80 

Children's Industrial Home, Harrisburg, Pa 114 

Children's Industrial Home, New Brunswick, N. J 92 

Children's Industrial Home and School, Cleveland, Ohio . . 108 

Children's Island Sanitarium, Marblehead, Mass 276 

Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Children's Mission Home, Knoxville, Tenn 122 

Children's Mission to the Children of the Destitute, Boston, 

Mass 80 

Children's Orphan Home, Chambersburg, Pa 114 

Children's Receiving Home, Appleton, Wis 126 

Children's Receiving Home, Guthrie, Okla 112 

Children's Receiving Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

Children's Refuge, Chattanooga, Tenn 120 

Children's Temporary Home, New York, N. Y 98 

Children's Temporary Home, Pittsburg, Pa 118 

Children's Temporary Home, Washington, D. C 62 

Child's Hospital, The, Albany, N. Y 178 

Chillicothe Emergency Hospital, Chillicothe, Ohio 194 

Chinese Free Dispensary, Portland, Oreg 198 

Chinese Medical Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Chinese Mission Home, San Francisco, Cal 266 



312 



INDEX. 



Page. 

Christ Child Day Nursery, Ossining, N . Y 102 

Christ Church Asylum, Baltimore, Md ' 76 

Christ Church Home, Detroit, Mich 238 

Christ Church Home, South Amboy , N. J 92 

Christ Church Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Christ Hospital, Jersey City, N.J 176 

Christian and Elenora Ruppert Home, Washington, D- C. . . 224 
Christian Church Widows and Orphans' Home, Louisville, 

Ky 74 

Christian H. Buhl Hospital, Sharon, Pa 206 

Christian Home, Council Bluffs, Iowa 228 

Christian Home for Orphan Children, Jersey City, N. J 90 

Christian Home for Women, Allegheny, Pa 288 

Christian Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Christian Orphan Home, Holdrege, Nebr 88 

Christian Orphanage, Los Angeles, Cal 56 

Christian Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo 86 

Christian Eefuge, Newark, N.J 280 

Christ's Home for Children, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Christ's Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Christ's Hospital, Topeka, Kans 150 

Church Charity Foundation Church Home, Buffalo, N. Y.. 246 

Church Dispensary of Southwark, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Church Home, Charleston, S. C 260 

Church Home, The, Cleveland, Ohio 252 

Church Home, Geneva, N. Y ■. 246 

Church Home, Hartford, Conn 222 

Church Home, Mobile, Ala 56 

Church Home, Norfolk, Ya 262 

Church Home, Orlando, Fla. 224 

Church Home and Infirmary, Baltimore, Md 154 

Church Home and Infirmary, Louisville, Ky 230 

Church Home and Orphanage, Jonestown, Pa 114 

Church Home for Aged, Infirm, and Disabled Colored People, 

Lawrenceville, Va 262 

Church Home for Aged Persons, Chicago, 111 226 

Church Home for Children, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Church Home for Orphan and Destitute Children, Boston, 

Mass 80 

Church Home for the Blind, Brooklyn, N. Y 300 

Church Home of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minn 240 

Church Home Orphanage, Charleston, S. C 120 

Church Hospital, Orlando, Fla 136 

Church Orphans' Home, Memphis, Tenn 122 

Church Rescue Mission, Boston, Mass 274 

Cincinnati Branch Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Cincinnati Eye, Nose, Throat, and Ear Hospital and Dis- 
pensary, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Cincinnati Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Cincinnati Orphan Asylum, Cincinnati, Ohio 106 

Cincinnati Union Bethel, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

Circleville Home and Hospital, Circleville, Ohio 252 

Citizens' Hospital, Aspen, Colo 132 

City and County Hospital, Austin, Tex 210 

City and County Hospital, Denver, Colo 132 

City and County Hospital, St. Paul, Minn 168 

City and County Hospital, The, San Francisco, Cal 130 

City Dispensary, Fall River, Mass 158 

City Dispensary, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

City Dispensary of St. Louis f Branch No. 1), St. Louis, Mo. 170 

City Dispensary of St. Louis (Branch No. 2), St. Louis, Mo. 170 

City Dispensary of St. Louis (Central), St. Louis, Mo 170 

City Free Dispensary, Richmond, Va 212 

City Hospital, Charles City, Iowa 148 

City Hospital, Charleston, S. C 208 

City Hospital, Columbus, Ga 138 

City Hospital, Ithaca, N. Y 182 

City Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

City Hospital, Newark, Ohio 196 

City Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va 216 

City Hospital, Roanoke, Va 212 

City Hospital, Wheeling, W. Va 216 

City Hospital and Sanitarium, Henderson, Ky 150 

City Hospital for Contagious Diseases, Hot Springs, Ark 128 

City Hospital for Women, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

City Hospital of Akron, Akron, Ohio 192 

City Hospital of Casper, Casper, Wyo 218 

City Hospital of Mobile, Mobile, Ala 128 

City Hospital of Quincy, Quincy, Mass 160 

City Isolation Hospital, Mason City, Iowa 148 

City Lazaretto, The, Columbus, Ga 138 

City Mission Home, Seattle, Wash 292 

City Mission Rescue Home, New Bedford, Mass 276 

City Mission Settlement No. 2, Brooklyn, N. Y 280 



Page. 

City Orphan Asylum, Charleston, S. C 120 

City Orphan Asylum, Salem, Mass 236 

City Receiving Hospital, Sacramento, Cal 130 

City Temporary Home for Women and Children, Boston, 

Mass 274 

Clara de Hirsch Home for Working Girls, New York, N. Y. 282 

Claremont Cottage Hospital, Claremont, N. H 174 

Clarence Barker Memorial Hospital and Dispensary, Bilt- 

more, N. C 192 

Clarissa C. Cook Home for the Friendless, Davenport, Iowa. 230 

Clark County Children's Home, Springfield, Ohio 110 

Clark Hospital, Elkhart, Ind 146 

Clark Manor House, Canandaigua, N. Y 246 

Clark Memorial Home for Aged Women, Springfield, Ohio. 254 

Clarke School for the Deaf, Northampton, Mass 298 

Clay Center Hospital, Clay Center, Kans 150 

Clay County Orphans' Home, Knightsville, Ind 70 

Clearfield Hospital, Clearfield, Pa 198 

Clementina Gil Day Nursery, Tampa, Fla 62 

Cleveland Christian Orphanage, Cleveland, Ohio 108 

Cleveland City Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Cleveland Day Nursery and Free Kindergarten Association, 

Cleveland, Ohio ' 108 

Cleveland Detention Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Cleveland General Hospital and Dispensary, Cleveland, 

Ohio 194 

Cleveland Home for Aged Colored People, Cleveland, Ohio. 252 

Cleveland Homeopathic Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Cleveland Orphan Institution, Versailles, Ky 74 

Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum, Cleveland, Ohio 108 

Clifton Accident Benevolent Association Hospital, Clifton, 

Ariz 128 

Clinton County Children's Home, Wilmington, Ohio 112 

Clinton Hospital, Clinton, Mass 158 

Clovernook Home for the Blind, Mt. Healthy, Ohio 302 

Coats ville Hospital , Coatsville, Pa ." 198 

Cohoes Hospital, Cohoes, N. Y 182 

College Crfeche, Buffalo, N. Y 96 

Collett Home, Newport, Ind 228 

Colorado Children's Home, Denver, Colo 58 

Colorado Conference Deaconess Hospital, Colorado Springs, 

Colo 132 

Colorado Sanitarium, Boulder, Colo 132 

Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind, Colorado Springs, 

Colo 296 

Colorado Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Monte Vista, Colo . . . 222 

Colorado Springs Day Nursery, Colorado Springs, Colo 58 

Colorado State Home for Dependent and Neglected Chil- 
dren, Denver, Colo 58 

Colored Aged Home and Orphanage, Newark, N. J 244 

Colored Children's Orphan Home, Kansas City, Kans 72 

Colored Home and School, Tampa, Fla 224 

Colored Industrial and Literary Institute, New Brunswick, 

N. J 92 

Colored Industrial Home and School, New Orleans, La 74 

Colored Old Folks and Orphan Home, Mobile, Ala 220 

Colored Old Ladies' Home, Little Rock, Ark 220 

Colored Orphan Asylum, New York. N. Y 98 

Colored Orphan Asylum, Oxford, N. C 106 

Colored Orphan Industrial Home, Lexington, Ky 230 

Colored Orphans' Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

Colored Orphans' Home and Industrial School of West Vir- 
ginia, Huntington, W. Va 126 

Columbia Hospital, Columbia, Pa 198 

Columbia Hospital, Columbia, S. C 208 

Columbia Hospital and Training School, Norway, Mich 164 

Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-in Asylum, Wash- 
ington, D. C 136 

Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, Washington, 

D. C 296 

Columbian University Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Columbus Hospital, Great Falls, Mont 172 

Columbus Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

Concord Home for the Aged, Concord, Mass 236 

Concordia Orphans' Home, Marwood, Pa 114 

Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospital, Johnstown, Pa 200 

Confederate Home, Austin, Tex 260 

Confederate Soldiers' Home, Atlanta, Ga 224 

Confederate Soldiers' Home, Beauvoir, Miss 240 

Confederate Soldiers' Home, Higginsville, Mo 240 

Confederate Veterans' Home, Jacksonville, Fla 224 

Confederate Veterans' Hospital, Vicksburg, Miss 168 

Congress Hospital, Congress, Ariz 128 

Connecticut Institute for the Blind, The, Hartford, Conn. . . 296 



INDEX. 



313 



Page. 
Connecticut School and Nursery for the Blind, Hartford, 

Conn 296 

Connie Maxwell Orphanage, Greenwood, S. C 120 

Contagious Diseases Hospital, Augusta, Ga 138 

Convalescent Home, Belmont, Mass 274 

Convalescent Home for Women, St. Louis, Mo 278 

Convalescent Home of the Children's Hospital, Wellesley, 

Mass 276 

Convent of Our Lady and St. Francis, Baltimore, Md 78 

Convent of the Good Shepherd, New Orleans, La 272 

Convent of the Good Shepherd, St. Louis, Mo 278 

Cook Benevolent Institution, Louisville, Ky 230 

Cook County Detention Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Cook County Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Cook County Hospital for Consumptives, Chicago, 111. 140 

Cooley Dickinson Hospital, Northampton, Mass 160 

Cooper Hospital, Camden, N. J 176 

Copper Queen Hospital, Bisbee, Ariz 128 

Cornelia Memorial Orphan Home, New Albany, Ind 70 

Cornell Infirmary, Ithaca, N. Y 182 

Cornell University Medical College Dispensary, New York, 

N. Y 184 

Corning Hospital, Corning, N. Y 182 

Corry Hospital, Corry, Pa 200 

Cortland County Home for Aged Women, Homer, N. Y 246 

Cortland Hospital, Cortland, N. Y 182 

Cottage Hospital, Creston, Iowa 148 

Cottage Hospital, Haverhill, N. H 174 

Cottage Hospital, Laconia, N. H 1 74 

Cottage Hospital, Peoria, 111 144 

Cottage Hospital, Woodsville, N. H 174 

Cottage Place Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Cottage State Hospital, Blossburg, Pa 198 

Cottage State Hospital, Connellsville, Pa 200 

Cottage State Hospital, Mercer, Pa 200 

Cottage State Hospital, Philipsburg, Pa 204 

County and City Hospital, Huntsville, Ala 128 

Covington Protestant Children's Home, Covington, Ky 74 

Craig Colony for Epileptics, Sonyea, N. Y 250 

Crawford Old Men's Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Crazy Jane Day Nursery, Newark, N.J 92 

Creche, The, Council Bluffs, Iowa 72 

Creche, The, Omaha, Nebr 88 

Crystal Falls General Hospital, Crystal Falls, Mich 162 

Cullis Consumptives' Home, Boston, Mass 234 

Cumberland Rest, Fort Worth, Tex 260 

Cumberland Street Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Cunningham Deaconess Orphanage, Urbana, 111 68 

Curtis Home, Meriden, Conn 222 

Curtis Home, Pittsburg, Pa 290 

Cashing Hospital, Leavenworth, Kans 150 

Daisy Fields Home and Hospital for Crippled Children, 

Englewood, N.J 90 

Dale Street Infirmary, St. Paul, Minn 168 

Danbury Home, The, Danbury, Conn 60 

Danbury Hospital, Danbury, Conn 134 

Daniel Memorial Orphanage and Home for the Friendless, 

Jacksonville, Fla 224 

Danish Lutheran Orphans' Home, Chicago, 111 64 

Danish Lutheran Orphans' Home, Elkhorn, Iowa 72 

Danville Dispensary, Danville, 111 142 

Danville Orphanage, Danville, Va 124 

Darke County Children's Home, Greenville, Ohio 110 

Daughters of Jerusalem Home, Springfield, Ohio 254 

Davenport Home for Female Orphan Children, Bath, N. Y. 94 

David City Hospital, David City, Nebr 172 

Davidson Hospital, Davidson, N. C 192 

Daviess County Orphans' Home, Washington, Ind 70 

Davis Child Shelter, The, Charleston, W. Va. . . - 126 

Davis Memorial Hospital, Elkins, W. Va 214 

Day Home, Troy, N. Y 104 

Day Home for Working Women's Children, Nashville, Tenn. 122 

Day Kimball Hospital, Putnam, Conn 136 

Day Nurseries, Springfield, Mass 82 

Day Nursery, Denver, Colo 58 

Day Nursery, Jersey City, N.J 90 

Day Nursery, Meriden, Conn 60 

Day Nursery, Mt. Vernon, N. Y 98 

Day Nursery, New Brunswick, N. J 92 

Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Day Nursery, St. Joseph, Mo 86 

Day Nursery, St. Paul, Minn 86 

Day Nursery, Schenectady, N. Y 104 



Page. 

Day Nursery, South Bethlehem, Pa 118 

Day Nursery, The, Stamford, Conn 60 

Day Nursery and Hospital for Babies, AViimington, Del 136 

Day Nursery for Colored Children, Washington, D. C 62 

Day Nursery of the Oranges, Orange, N.J 92 

Deaconess Home, Bangor, Me 272 

Deaconess Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Deaconess Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Deaconess Old People's Home, Hillyard, Wash 262 

Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute for Colored Youths, Austin, 

Tex 304 

Deaf-Mute Institution of the Holy Rosary, Chinchuba, La.. 298 

Deborah Powers' Home for Old Ladies, Troy, N. Y 250 

Decatur County Orphans' Home, Greensburg, Ind 70 

Defiance County Children's Home, Defiance, Ohio 108 

Delaware County Children's Home, Muncie, Ind 70 

Delaware Hospital, Wilmington, Del 136 

Delaware Orphans' Home and Industrial School, Wilming- 
ton, Del 62 

Delegal Orphan Home and Industrial School, Savannah, Ga. 64 

Delia CoUins Rescue Home, Fort Worth, Tex 292 

Delray Dispensary, Delray, Mich 162 

Delta Count}' Hospital, Escanaba, Mich 164 

Delta Hospital of the King's Daughters, Clarksdale, Miss. . . 168 

Demilt Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

Denver and Gross College of Medicine Disnensary, Denver, 

Colo ' ". 132 

Denver and Rio Grande Hospital, Salida, Colo 134 

Denver Emergency Hospital, Denver, Colo 132 

Denver Homeopathic Hospital, Denver, Colo 132 

Denver Maternity and Woman's Hospital, Denver, Colo ... 132 

Denver Orphans' Home, Denver, Colo 60 

Denver Sanitarium, Denver, Colo 132 

De Pelchin Faith Home, Houston, Tex 122 

Des Moines Detention Hospital, Des Moines, Iowa 148 

Des Moines Home for Friendless Children, Des Moines, Iowa 72 

Detention Hospital, Council Bluffs, Iowa 148 

Detention Hospital, Hancock, Mich 164 

Detention Hospital, Janesville, Wis 216 

Detention Hospital, Missoula, Mont 172 

Detroit Emergency Hospital, Detroit, Mich 162 

Detroit Homeopathic College Free Dispensary, Detroit, Mich . 162 

D'Evereux Hall Orphan Asylum, Natchez, Miss 86 

Dewing Children's Home, Kalamazoo, Mich 84 

Dickey ville Free Dispensary, Baltimore, Md 154 

Diocesan Orphan Asylum, Metamora, 111 68 

Dispensary of Hahnemann Hospital College, San Francisco, 

Cal 130 

District of Columbia Industrial Home School, Washington, 

D. C 62 

Dixie Hospital, Hampton, Va 212 

Dixon Public Hospital, Dixon, 111 142 

Doane Orphanage, Longmeadow, Mass 82 

Dobbs Ferry Hospital, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y 182 

Dolan Children' s Aid Asylum , Baltimore, Md 78 

Dominican Convent of Our Lady of the Rosary, New York, 

NY 98 

Door of Blessing, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Door of Hope, Columbia, S. C 290 

Door of Hope, Indianapolis, Ind 270 

Door of Hope, Jersey City, N. J 280 

Door of Hope, Macon, Ga 268 

Door of Hope, Rochester, N. Y 284 

Door of Hope, Tappan, N. Y 284 

Door of Hope, Worcester, Mass 276 

Dorcas Home, Owosso, Mich 84 

Dorcas Invalids' Home, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

Douglass Hospital, Kansas City, Kans 150 

Dover Children's Home, Dover, N. H 88 

Dover Deaconess Home, Dover, 111 66 

Down Town Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Downer Home, Milwaukee, Wis 294 

Drake LTniversity Medical College Free Dispensary, Des 

Moines, Iowa .' 148 

Drusilla Home, Madison, Ind 228 

Du Bois Hospital, Du Bois, Pa 200 

Dubuque Rescue Home, Dubuque, Iowa 272 

Dulcenia Home, Marshall, Mich 238 

Duval County Isolation Hospital, Jacksonville, Fla 136 

E. M. Byers Home for Boys, Denver, Colo 60 

East End Dispensary, Memphis, Tenn 208 

East New Y^ork Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y^ 180 

East Orange Homeopathic Dispensary, Orange, N. J 176 



314 



INDEX. 



Page. 

East Side Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital, Washington, 

D. C ' 136 

Eastern Maine General Hospital, Bangor, Me 154 

Eastern Star and Masonic Home, Macon, 111 226 

Eastlake Orphans' Home, Eastlake, Ala 56 

Easton Home for Friendless Children, Easton, Pa 114 

Easton Hospital and Dispensary, Easton, Pa 200 

Ebenezer Altenheim, Ebenezer, N. Y 246 

Ebenezer Hospital, Madison, Minn 166 

Ebenezer Orphan Home, Flatrock, Ohio 108 

Ebenezer Training Home, Del Eio, Tenn 122 

Eclectic College Free Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 . 

Eddy County Hospital, Carlsbad, N. Mex 178 

Edgar County Children's Home, Paris, 111 68 

Edwin Forrest Home, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Egenolf Day Nursery, Elizabeth, N. J 90 

Egenton Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md 78 

Eighth Avenue Baby Shelter and Day Nursery, Newark, N. J. 92 

Eleanor Hospital, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

Eleanor Moore Hospital, Boone, Iowa 148 

Eliza Huntington Memorial Home, Norwich, Conn 222 

Eliza Jennings Home, Cleveland, Ohio 252 

Elizabeth Bard Memorial Hospital, Ventura, Cal 132 

Elizabeth E. Marcy Home Dispensary, Chicago, 111. 140 

Elizabeth Emergency Hospital, Elizabeth, N. J 176 

Elizabeth General Hospital and Dispensary, Elizabeth, N. J. 176 

Elizabeth Home, Haverhill, Mass 82 

Elizabeth Home for Girls, New York, N. Y 282 

Elizabeth Orphan Asylum, Elizabeth, N.J 90 

Elk County General Hospital, Ridgway, Pa 206 

ElkanahHome, Eidgefield, N. J 92 

Ella Reed Home, Sharon, Mass 82 

Elliot Hospital, Manchester, N. H 174 

Elliott City Hospital, Keene, N. H 174 

Ellis Hospital, Schenectady, N. Y 190 

Ellsworth Hospital, Ellsworth, Kans 150 

Emanuel Sisterhood Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Emanuel Sisterhood Free Polyclinic, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Emaus Orphan House, Middletown, Pa 114 

Emeline Thomas Day Nursery, Chicago, 111 64 

Emergency and General Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Emergency Home, Vicksburg, Miss 278 

Emergency Home and Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Emergency Hospital, Annapolis, Md 1 54 

Emergency Hospital, Bridgeport, Conn 134 

Emergency Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Emergency Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Emergency Hospital, Dallas, Tex 210 

Emergency Hospital, Danbury, Conn 134 

Emergency Hospital, Duluth, Minn 166 

Emergency Hospital, Frederick, Md 156 

Emergency Hospital, Jacksonville, Fla 136 

Emergency Hospital, Kankakee, 111 144 

Emergency Hospital, Lynn, Mass 160 

Emergency Hospital, Nashua, N. H 174 

Emergency Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

Emergency Hospital, Tampa, Fla 138 

Emergency Hospital, Texarkana, Ark 128 

Emergency Hospital, Wausau, Wis 218 

Emergency Hospital, Wyandotte, Mich 166 

Emergency Hospital and Free Dispensary, Toledo, Ohio . . . 196 

Emergency Hospital of Manstield, Mansfield, Ohio 196 

Emergency Shelter for Women with Children, New York, 

N. Y ■ 282 

Emily Balch Cottage Hospital, Plymouth, N. H 174 

Employees' Emergency Hospital, Rochester, N. Y 188 

Englewood Hospital, Englewood, N. J 176 

Englewood Infant Nursery, Chicago, 111 64 

Englewood Union Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

Ensworth Deaconess Hospital, St. Joseph, Mo 170 

Ephpheta School for the Deaf, Chicago, 111 296 

Epiphany Church Home, Washington, D. C 224 

Episcopal Church Home, Pittsburg, Pa 258 

P^piscopal Church Home, Troy. N. Y 250 

Episcopal Eye, Ear, and Tlndnt I lu^ijltal, Washington, D.C. 136 

Episcopal Hospital for Chi Mien, ( incinnati, Ohio 194 

Episcopal Orphans' Hoiin', S:i\:iiiiiali, Ga 64 

Epworth Hospital, Middlesljoro, Kv 152 

Epworth Hospital, South Bend, Ind 146 

Epworth Orphanage, Columbia, S. C 120 

Erie County Children's Home, Sandusky, Ohio 110 

Erie Home for the Friendless, Erie, Pa 254 

Eruptive Hospital, Jeffersonville, Ind 146 



Page. 

Erwin Home, New Britain, Conn 222 

Escambia County Isolation Hospital, Pensacola, Fla 136 

Essex Union Emergency and General Hospital, Salem, Mass. 160 

Eureka Sanitarium, Eureka, Cal 128 

Evangelical Church Home of Buffalo, Buffalo, N. Y 246 

Evangelical Deaconess Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Evangelical Home for the Aged, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Evangelical Lutheran Bethlehem Orphan Asylum, New 

Orleans, La 74 

Evangelical Lutheran Home, Belle Plaine, Minn 240 

Evangelical Lutheran Institution for the Deaf, North Detroit, 

Mich 298 

Evangelical Lutheran Old Folks' Home, Arlington Heights, 

111 226 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home, Fort Dodge, Iowa. . 72 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home, Fremont, Nebr 88 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home, Peoria, 111 68 

Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home, Waverly, Iowa 72 

Evangelical Lutheran St. John's OrphanHome, Buffalo, N. Y. 96 

Evangelical Orphans' Home, Hoyleton, 111. 66 

Evanston Hospital, Evanston, 111 144 

Evening Dispensary for Women, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Evening Dispensary for Working Women and Girls, Balti- 
more, Md 154 

Everett Hospital, Everett, Wash 214 

Ewing Street Dispensary, Chicago, III 140 

Ex-Confederate Home of Arkansas, Little Rock, Ark 220 

Exeter Cottage Hospital, Exeter, N. H 174 

Eye, Ear, and Throat Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital, New Orleans, La 152 

Fabiola Hospital, Eveleth, Minn 166 

Fabiola Hospital, Oakland, Cal 130 

Fair Haven Rescue Home, Orange, N. J 280 

Fairfield County Children's Home, I>ancaster, Ohio 110 

Fairfield County Temporary Home, Norwalk, Conn 60 

Fairmont City Hospital, Fairmont, W. Va 214 

Fairmount Children's Home, Alliance, Ohio 106 

Fairview Home for Friendless Children, Troy, N. Y 104 

Faith Cottage, Asheville, N. C 284 

Faith Home, New Orleans, La 232 

Faith Plome for Children, Lowell, Mass 82 

Faith Home for Incurables, Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Fall River City Hospital, Fall River, Mass 158 

Falls of Schuylkill Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Fannie C. Paddock Memorial Hospital, Tacoma, Wash 214 

Fanny Allen Hospital, Winooski, Vt 212 

Farren Memorial Hospital, Montague City, Mass 160 

Father Harkin's Home for Aged Women, Holyoke, Mass. . . 236 

Faulkner Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Faxton Hospital, Utica, N. Y 190 

Fayette County Children's Home, Washington Court House, 

Ohio 112 

Fejervary Home, Davenport, Iowa 230 

Felician Sisters' Orphanage, Detroit, Mich 84 

Female Charity School, Fredericksburg, Va 124 

Female Orphan Asylum, Portland, Me 76 

Female Orphan School, Camden Point, Mo 86 

Female Orphans' Home, Baton Rouge, La ' 74 

Fifteenth Street Baptist Church Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y. 180 

Findlay Hospital, Findlay, Ohio '. 196 

Findlay Orphanage and Children's Industrial Home, Find- 
lay, Ohio - 108 

Fink Asylum, New Orleans, La 232 

Finley Hospital, Dubuque, Iowa 148 

First Allegheny Day Nursery and Temporary Home, Alle- 
gheny, Pa 112 

Fitch Cr^he, Buffalo, N. Y 96 

Fitchburg Home for Old Ladies, Fitchburg, Mass 236 

Fitchburg Union Aid Home for Children, Fitchburg, Mass. . 80 

Fitch's Home for Soldiers, Noroton Heights, Conn 222 

Five Points House of Industry, New York, N. Y 282 

Flagler Emergency Hospital, Lockport, N. Y 184 

Florence Children's Home, Alexandria, Va 292 

Florence Crittenton Anchorage, Chicago, 111 270 

Florence Crittenton Children's Home, Alexandria, Va 292 

Florence Crittenton Home, Atlanta, Ga 268 

Florence Crittenton Home, Baltimore, Md 274 

Florence Crittenton Home, Bismarck, N. Dak 286 

Florence Crittenton Home, Charleston, S. C 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, Chattanooga, Tenn 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, Columbus, Ga 268 

Florence Crittenton Home, Coluinbus, Ohio 286 

Florence Crittenton Home, Denver, Colo 266 



INDEX. 



315 



Page. 

Florence Crittenton Home, Detroit, Mich 276 

Florence Crittenton Home, Erie, Pa 288 

Florence Crittenton Home, Harrisburg, Pa 288 

Florence Crittenton Home, Helena, Mont 278 

Florence Crittenton Home, Kansas City, Mo 278 

Florence Crittenton Home, Knoxville, Tenii 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, Los Angeles, Cal _ 266 

Florence Crittenton Home, Louisville, Ky 272 

Florence Crittenton Home, Lynchburg, Va 292 

Florence Crittenton Home, Meridian, Miss 278 

Florence Crittenton Home, Minneapolis, Minn 276 

Florence Crittenton Home, Nashville, Tenn 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, New Haven, Conn 268 

Florence Critte'nton Home, Norfolk, Va 292 

Florence Crittenton Home, Ogden, Utah 292 

Florence Crittenton Home, Paterson, N. J 280 

Florence Crittenton Home, Peoria, 111 270 

Florence Crittenton Home, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Florence Crittenton Home, Phoenix, Ariz 266 

Florence Crittenton Home, Pittsburg, Pa 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, Portland, Oreg 286 

Florence Crittenton Home, Roanoke, Va 292 

Florence Crittenton Home, San Francisco, Cal 266 

Florence Crittenton Home, Savannah, Ga. 268 

Florence Crittenton Home, Scranton, Pa 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, Seattle, Wash 292 

Florence Crittenton Home, Sioux City, Iowa 272 

Florence Crittenton Home, Trenton, N. J 280 

Florence Crittenton Home, Washington, D. G 268 

Florence Crittenton Home, Williamsport, Pa. 290 

Florence Crittenton Home, Wilmington, Del 268 

Florence Crittenton Home, Youngstown, Ohio 286 

Florence Crittenton Mission, New York, N. Y 282 

Florence Crittenton Mission, Topeka, Ivans 272 

Florence Crittenton Rescue Home, Houston, Tex 292 

Florence Crittenton Rescue Home, Wheeling, W. Va 292 

Florence Home for Working Girls, New York, N. Y 282 

Florida Baptist Orphanage, Arcadia, Fla 62 

Florida East Coast Railway Hospital, St. Augustine, Fla 138 

Florida School forBlind, Deaf, and Dumb, St. Augustine, Fla. 296 

Flower Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

Flower Mission Hospital, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

Fordham Receiotion Hospital and Dispensary, New York, 

N. Y 184 

Fort Wavne Orphan Home, Fort Wavne, Ind 68 

Fort Worth Benevolent Home, Fort Worth, Tex 292 

Forty-fourth Street Lodging House, New York, N. Y 98 

Forty-ninth Street Station Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa.. 116 

Foster Home, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Foulke and Long Institute for Orphan Girls, Langhorne, Pa. 114 

Foundling Asylum, Richmond, Va 124 

Foundling Asjdum of the San Francisco Lying-in Hospital, 

San Francisco, Cal 58 

Fowle Memorial Hospital, Washington, N. C 192 

Framingham Hospital, Framingham, Mass 158 

Frances Comfort Thomas Orphans' Home, Columbus, Ind. . 68 

Frances de Pauw Industrial School, Los Angeles, Cal 56 

Frances E. Willard National Temperance Hospital, Chicago, 

111 140 

Frankford Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Franklin County Children's Home, Brookville, Ind 68 

Franklin County Children's Home, Columbus, Ohio 108 

Franklin County Public Hospital, Greenfield, Mass 160 

Franklin Hospital, Franklin, Pa 200 

Franklin Reformatory Home for Inebriates, Philadelphia, 

Pa 288 

Franklin Square Hospital, Baltimore, Md 154 

Fred Finch Orphanage, Fruitvale, Cal 56 

Frederick City Hospital, Frederick, Md 156 

Frederick Douglas Memorial Hospital and Training School, 

Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Free Dispensary, Fort Worth, Tex 210 

Free Dispensary, Grand Rapids, Mich 164 

Free Dispensary, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Free Dispensary, Providence, R. 1 206 

Free Dispensary for Diseases of the Lungs, Scranton, Pa... 206 
Free Dispensary of the Central College of Physicians and 

Surgeons, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

Free Dispensary of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, 

San Francisco, Cal 130 

Free Home for Consumptives in the City of Boston, Boston, 

Mass 234 

Free Home for Young Girls, New York, N. Y. . ., 282 

Free Hospital for Poor Consumptives, White Haven, Pa. . . 206 



Page. 

Free Hospital for Women, Brookline, Mass : 158 

Freedmen's Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Freedmen's Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 74 

French Benevolent Society Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

French Benevolent Society Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

French Hospital, San Francisco, Cal _ 130 

French Orphans' Home, Patoka, Ind. 70 

French Women's Christian Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Fresno County Orphanage, Fresno, Cal 56 

Friendly Inn, Baltimore, Md 274 

Friendly Inn, Indianapolis, Ind 270 

Friends' Asylum for Colored Orphans, Richmond, Va 124 

Friends' Boarding Home, Kennett Square, Pa 256 

Friends' Boarding Home, Newtown, Pa 256 

Friends' Home for Children, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Friends' Orphanage, High Point, N. C 106 

Fritz Renter Altenheim, West Hoboken, N. J _ 244 

Gad S. Johnson Orphanage, Macon, Ga 64 

Gafney Home for the Aged, Rochester, N. H 242 

Gale Home, Manchester, N. H 242 

Galesburg Hospital, Galesburg, 111 144 

Galilee Mission, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Gallaudet Home for Aged and Infirm Deaf, Wappingers 

Falls,N.Y 300 

Gallia County Children's Home, Gallipolis, Ohio 110 

Galveston Orphans' Home, Galveston, Tex 122 

Galvin Emergency and General Hospital, Boston, Mass 156 

Gardner Home for Elderly People, Gardner, Mass 236 

Garfield Memorial Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Garland County Hospital, Hot Springs, Ark 128 

Garwood Home, Champaign, 111 226 

Gates Avenue Homeopathic Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Gaylord Farm Sanatorium, Wallingford, Conn 136 

General German Aged People's Home, Baltimore, Md 232 

General German Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md 78 

General Memorial Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

Geneva City Hospital, Geneva, N. Y 182 

Genevieve Orphanage, Shreveport, La 76 

George H. Nettleton Home for Aged W^omen, Kansas City, 

Mo 240 

George Junior Republic, Freeville, N. Y 96 

George Nugent Home for Baptists, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Georgia Academy for the Blind, Macon, Ga 296 

Georgia Baptist Orphans' Home, Hapeville, Ga 64 

Georgia Colored Industrial and Orphans' Home, Macon, Ga. 64 

Georgia Industrial Home, Macon, Ga 64 

Georgia Infirmary (colored). Savannah, Ga. 138 

Georgia School for the Deaf, Cave Springs, Ga 296 

German American Hospital, Chicago, 111 140 

German Baptist Home, Fostoria, Obio 252 

German Baptist Home, Philadelphia, Pa < 256 

German Baptist Old People's Home, Chicago, 111 226 

German Baptist Orphans' Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

German Deaconess Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

German Evangelical Home for the Aged, Brooklyn, N. Y. . . 246 

German Evangelical Lutheran Orphan Asylum, Addison, 111 . 64 
German Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home, Indianapolis, 

Ind 70 

German Evangelical Old People's Home and Orphanage, 

Bensenville, 111 ■ 226 

German General Protestant Orphan Asylum, Cincinnati, 

Ohio 106 

German General Protestant Orphan Home, Indianapolis, 

Ind 70 

German General Protestant Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo. . 86 

German Home for the Aged, Rochester, N. Y 250 

German Home for the Recreation of Women and Children, 

Brooklyn, N.Y 280 

German Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

German Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

German Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

German Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 168 

German Hospital, Newark, N. J. 176 

German Hospital, The, San Francisco, Cal 130 

German Hospital and Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

German Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, 111 140 

German Hospital of the City of Philadelphia, Philadel- 
phia, Pa 202 

German Immigrants' Home and Seamen's Mission, Balti- 
more, Md 274 

German Lutheran Emigrant House, New York, N. Y 282 

German Lutheran General Hospital, Sioux City, Iowa 150 



316 



INDEX. 



Page. 
German Lutheran Orphan and Old People's Home, Musca- 
tine, Iowa 230 

German Lutheran Orphan Home, Des Peres, Mo 86 

German Masonic Home, Tappan, N. Y 250 

German Methodist Deaconess Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

German Methodist Orphans' Home, Berea, Ohio 106 

German Odd Fellows' Home, New York, N. Y 248 

German Old People's Home, Dimoud, Gal 220 

German Old People's Home, Oak Park, 111 226 

German Orphan Asylum, Washington, D. C 62 

German Pioneer Home, Jersey City, N. J 242 

German Polyclinic, New York, N. "Y 184 

German Protestant Bethany Home, New Orleans, La 232 

German Protestant Home for Orphans and Old People, De- 
troit, Mich 238 

German Protestant Home for the Aged, Fairoaks, Pa 254 

German Protestant Home for the Aged and Inlirm, New 

Orleans, La 232 

German Protestant Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 74 

German Protestant Orphan Asylum, West Liberty, Pa 118 

German Protestant Orphan Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

German Protestant Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo 86 

German Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, Buffalo, N. Y... 96 

German Ruth Society Day Nursery, Lawrence, Mass 82 

German St. Vincent Orphan Asylum, St. Louis, Mo 86 

German town Dispensary and Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa... 202 

Gerry Orphanage, Gerry, N. Y 96 

Gerry Orphanage and Home, Gerry, N. Y 246 

Gilbert Home for Aged and Indigent Persons, Gloucester, 

Mass : 236 

Gill Hospital, Steubenville, Ohio 196 

Gill Odd Fellows' Home, Ludlow, Vt 262 

Gillespie Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Gillis Orphans' Home, Kansas City, Mo 86 

Girard College, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Girls' Home, Belfast, Me 76 

Girls' Industrial Home and School, St. Louis, Mo 86 

Girls' Industrial Home of McLean County, Bloomington, 111. 64 

Girls' Industrial School, Indiana, Pa 114 

Girls' Orjihan Home, Columbus, Ga 64 

Girls' Training School, Williamsport, Pa. 120 

Glens Falls Home, Glens Falls, N. Y 246 

Globe Hospital, Freeport, 111 144 

Glockner Sanitarium, Colorado Springs, Colo 1 32 

Gogebic Hospital, Bessemer, Mich 162 

Golden Gate Orphanage, Lytton Springs, Cal 56 

Goldsboro Hospital, Goldsboro, N. C 192 

Good Samaritan Dispensary, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Good Samaritan Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

Good Samaritan Home, Washington, D. C 268 

Good Samaritan Hospital (colored), Charlotte, N. C 192 

Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Good Samaritan Hospital, Coffey ville, K ans 150 

Good Samaritan Hospital, Lebanon, Pa 200 

Good Samaritan Hospital , Lexington, K y 152 

Good Samaritan Hospital, Portland, Oreg 198 

Good Samaritan Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Good Samaritan Hospital, Suffern, N. Y 190 

Good Samaritan Hospital, Zanesville, Ohio 198 

Good Templars' Home, Vallejo, Cal 58 

Good Will Farm, Hinckley, Me 76 

Good Will Farm, Houghton, Mich 84 

Goodlander Home, Fort Scott, Kans 72 

Gordon Children's Home, Shelbyville, Ind 70 

Gottfried Krueger Greisenheim, Newarlc, N. J 244 

Gouverneur Reception Hospital, New York, N. Y 184 

Grace Church Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Grace Hospital, Detroit, Mich 162 

Grace Hospital, New Haven, Conn 134 

Grace Memorial Home, Providence, R. 1 120 

Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Ga 138 

Grafton Deaconess Hospital, Grafton, N. Dak 192 

Graham Home for Old Ladies, Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Graham Hospital, Greensboro, N. C 192 

Graham Hospital, Keokuk, Iowa 148 

Grand Forks Deaconess Hospital, Grand Forks, N. Dak 192 

Grand Rapids City Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich 164 

Grant County and Ladies' Hospital, Silver City, N. Mex... 178 

Grant County Orphans' Home, Marion, Ind 70 

Grant Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Gray Street Presbyterian Infirmary, Louisville, Ky 152 

Greeley Hospital, Greeley, Colo 134 

Green Bay Isolation Hospital, Green Bay, Wis 216 

Greene County Children's Home, Waynesburg, Pa 118 



Page. 

Greene County Children's Home, Xenia, Ohio 112 

Greenpoint Home for the Aged, Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Greylock Rest Sanitarium, Adams, Mass 156 

Grove House for Convalescer ts, Evanston, 111 270 

Guardian Angel Home, Joliet, 111 66 

Guardian Angel's Home, Leavenworth, Kans 72 

Guardians' Home, Indianapolis, Ind 70 

Guernsey County Children's Home, Cambridge, Ohio 106 

Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway Hospital, Temple, Tex. 210 

Gustavus Adolphus Orphans' Home, Jamestown, N. Y 98 

Guyer Memorial Home, Peoria, 111 226 

Gwynne Temporary Home for Children, Boston, Mass 80 

Gynecian Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Hackensack Hospital, Hackensack, N. J 176 

Hackley Hospital, Muskegon, Mich 164 

Haddock Memorial, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Hadley Industrial School for Girls, Hadley, Ind 70 

Hahnemann Hospital, New York, N. Y . _ 184 

Hahnemann Hospital, Rochester, N. Y 190 

Hahnemann Hospital, Scranton, Pa 206 

Hahnemann Hospital of the City of Chicago, Chicago, 111.. 140 

Hahnemann Medical College Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Hale Hospital, Haverhill, Mass 160 

Halsey Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 98 

Hamilton Street Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Hamline University Free Dispensary, Minneapolis, Minn... 166 

Hammond City Hospital, Geneseo, 111 144 

Hammond Hospital, Hammond, Ind 146 

Hamot Hospital, Erie, Pa 200 

Hampden Homeopathic Hospital, Springfield, Mass 162 

Hannah Neil Home for the Friendless, Columbus, Ohio 252 

Harbor Emergency Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Hare Orphans' Home, Columbus, Ohio 108 

Harlem Dispensary, New York, N. Y 184 

Harlem Eye, Ear, and Throat Infirmary, New York, N. Y. 184 

Harlem Reception Hospital and Dispensary, Harlem, N. Y. 184 

Harper Hospital, Detroit, Mich 162 

Harrisburg Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa 200 

Harrisburg Maternity Hospital, Harrisburg, Pa 200 

Harrison County Children's Home, Cadiz, Ohio 106 

Harrison County Hospital, Clarksburg, W. Va 214 

Harrison Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Hart Farm School, Fort Washington, Md 78 

Hartford County Temporary Home, Warehouse Point, Conn. 60 

Hartford Dispensary, Hartford, Conn 134 

Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn 134 

Hartford Orphan Asylum, Hartford, Conn 60 

Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Hartwig Kalley National Home, Indianapolis, Ind 228 

Harvey Medical College Dispensary, Chicago, 111 140 

Harwood Industrial Home, Albuquerque, N. Mex 94 

Haskell Home, Battle Creek, Mich 82 

Haven, The, Chicago, 111 270 

Havens Home for the Aged, East Aurora, N. Y 246 

Haverhill Day Nursery, Haverhill, Mass 82 

Hawkes Hospital of Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Hayes Hospital, Dover, N. H 174 

Hayes Mechanics Home, The, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Healy Asylum, Lewiston, Me 76 

Heaton Hospital, Montpelier, Vt 212 

Hebrew Day Nursery, Baltimore, Md 78 

Hebrew Friendly Inn and Aged Home, Baltimore, Md 232 

Hebrew Home for Aged and Infirm, Richmond, V^a 262 

Hebrew Home for Aged Disabled, San Francisco, Cal 220 

Hebrew Hospital and Asylum, Baltimore, Md 154 

Hebrew Hospital and Asylum (Home Department), Balti- 
more, Md - 232 

Hebrew Infant Asylum, New York, N. Y 100 

Hebrew Ladies Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Heljrew Orphan Asylum, New York, N. Y 100 

Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Newark, N. J 92 

Hebrew Orphan Asylum of Baltimore City, Baltimore, Md. 78 

Hebrew Orphans' Home, Atlanta, Ga. . 62 

Hebrew Shelter Home, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society, New York, N. Y 100 

Hebrew Sheltering House and Home for the Aged, New 

York, N. Y 282 

Hebron Industrial Home, Montreat, N. C 106 

Helen Gould Home, Wichita, Kans 72 

Helping Hand Home and Mission, San Diego, Cal 266 

Helping Hand Institute, Kansas City, Mo 278 

Helping Hand Temporary Home, Boston, Mass 80 

Henrie Barret Monfort Home, Louisville, Ky 272 



INDEX. 



317 



Page. 

Henrietta Hospital, East St. Louis, 111 142 

Henry Boyle Catholic Home for the Aged, Fond du Lac, 

Wis..-.- 264 

Henry Keep Home, Watertown, N. Y 250 

Henry Logan Children's Home, Parkersburg, W. Va 126 

Henry Phipps Institute, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Hephzibah Rescue Home, St. Louis, Mo 278 

Hephzibah Rescue Home, Springfield, 1 11 270 

Hephzibah Rescue Home, Tampa, Fla 268 

Herkimer Emergency Hospital, Herkimer, N. Y 182 

Hibbing Pesthouse, Hibbing, Minn , 166 

Highland County Children's Home, Hillsboro, Ohio 110 

Highland Hospital, Matteawan, N. Y 184 

Hillman Hospital, Birmingham, Ala 128 

Hillsboro County Isolation Hospital, Tampa, Fla 138 

Hinton Hospital, Hinton, W. Va 216 

Hiram Beats Memorial Home, Somerville, N. J . . - 92 

Hocking County Children's Home, Logan, Ohio 110 

Holiness Orphans' Home, Peniel, Tex - 122 

Holland Home for the Aged, Paterson, N. J - - 244 

Holland LTnion Benevolent Association Home, Grand Rap- 
ids, Mich 238 

Hollenbeck Home, The, Los Angeles, Cal 220 

Holmes County Childi-en's Home, Millersburg, Ohio 110 

Holt Street Female Orphan Asylum, Norfolk,' Va 124 

Holy Cross Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah 210 

Holy Family Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Holy Family Hospital, Laporte, Ind 146 

Holy Family Hospital, Manitowoc, Wis 216 

Holy Family Institute, Holy oke. Mass 82 

Holy Family Orphan Asylum, Emsworth, Pa 114 

Holy Ghost Hospital for Incurables, Cambridge, Mass 158 

Holy Innocent Foundling Asylum, Richmond, Va 124 

Holy Providence House, Maud, Pa 114 

Holy Rosary Institution, West Hoboken, N. J 92 

Holyoke City Hospital, Holyoke, Mass 160 

Home, The, Hazelton, Pa 288 

Home, The, Ithaca, N. Y 246 

Home, The, Waco, Tex 292 

Home and Infirmary of Western Maryland, Cumberland, 

Md : 156 

Home for Aged and Day Nursery, Worcester, Mass 238 

Home for Aged and Destitute Women, New Haven, Conn.- 222 

Home for Aged and Destitute Women, Salem, Mass 236 

Home for Aged and Disabled, Brattleboro, Vt 262 

Home for Aged and Disabled Railroad Employees of Amer- 
ica, Highland Park, 111 226 

Home for Aged and Indigent Women, Covington, Ky 230 

Home for Aged and Infirm, Yonkers, N. Y 250 

Home for Aged and Infirm Colored People, Chicago, 111 - - - 226 
Home for Aged and Infirm Colored People, Mills College, 

Cal 220 

Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons, Philadelphia, 

Pa :---- 256 

Home for Aged and Infirm Colored Women, Pittsburg, Pa - 258 

Home for Aged and Infirm Deaf, Doylestown, Pa 302 

Home for Aged and Infirm Hebrews, New York, N. Y 248 

Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Home for Aged and Infirm Israelites, San Francisco, CaL . . 220 

Home for Aged and Infirm Women, Easton, Pa 254 

Home for Aged and Invalid Women, Northampton, Mass . - 236 

Home for Aged Colored Women, Boston, Mass 234 

Home for Aged Colored Women, Providence, R. 1 260 

Home for Aged Couples, Boston, Mass 234 

Home for Aged Couples, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Home for Aged Couples and Old Men, Bath, Me 232 

Home for Aged Indigent Females, New York, N. Y 248 

Home for Aged Jews, Chicago, 111 226 

Home for Aged Men, Albany, N. Y 244 

Home for Aged Men, Bangor, Me 232 

Home for Aged Men, Boston, Mass 234 

Home for Aged Men, Newburyport, Mass 236 

Home for Aged Men, Portland, Me 232 

Home for Aged Men, Providence, R. I 260 

Home for Aged Men, Springfield, Mass 238 

Home for Aged Men and Couples, Utica, N. Y 250 

Home for Aged Men and Women in Framingham, Framing- 
ham, Mass 236 

Home for Aged Men in Worcester, Worcester, Mass 238 

Plome for Aged People, Allegheny, Pa 254 

Home for Aged People, Fall River, Mass 236 

Home for Aged People, Wilkinsburg, Pa 258 

Home for Aged People in Winchester, Winchester, Mass. . - 238 

Home f oi Aged Protestants, Wilkinsburg, Pa 258 



Page. 

Home for Aged Veterans, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Home for Aged Women, Bangor, Me 232 

Home for Aged Women, Bingham ton, N. Y 244 

Home for Aged Women, Boston, Mass 2.34 

Home for Aged Women, Bristol, R. 1 260 

Home for Aged Women, Burlington, N. J 242 

Home for Aged Women, Burlington, Vt 262 

Home for Aged Women, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 228 

Home for Aged Women, Cleveland, Ohio 252 

Home for Aged Women, Cohoes, N. Y 246 

Home for Aged Women, Elizabeth, N. J 242 

Home for Aged Women, Fredonia, N. Y 246 

Home for Aged Women, Jersey City, N. J 242 

Home for Aged Women, Lodi, Ohio 252 

Home for Aged Women, New York, N. Y 248 

Home for Aged Women, Portland, Me 232 

Home for Aged Women, Portsmouth, N. H 242 

Home for Aged Women, Portsmouth, Ohio 254 

Home for Aged Women, Providence, R. 1 260 

Home for Aged Women, Rockland, Me 232 

Home for Aged Women, Salem, Ohio 254 

Home for Aged Women, Springfield, Mass 238 

Home for Aged Women, Wilmington, Del 222 

Home for Aged Women and Children, Oakland, Cal 220 

Home for Aged Women in Worcester, Worcester, Mass 238 

Home for Children, Pottsville, Pa 118 

Home for Children and Aged Women, Minneapolis, Minn. - 240 

Home for Colored Children, Allegheny, Pa 112 

Home for Confederate Mothers and Widows, Baltimore, Md . 232 

Home for Consumptives, The, Denver, Colo 266 

Home for Consumptives, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Home for Crippled Children, Newark, N. J 92 

Home for Destitute Catholic Children, Boston, Mass. - - 80 

Home for Destitute Children, Burlington, Vt 124 

Home for Destitute Children, Newburyport, Mass 82 

Home for Destitute Children and Aged Persons, San An- 
tonio, Tex 262 

Home for Destitute Colored Children, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Home for Destitute Colored Women and Children, Wash- 
ington, D. C 224 

Home for Destitute Crippled Children, Chicago, 111 66 

Home for Elderly Women, Amsterdam, N. Y 244 

Home for Fallen and Friendless Women, Baltimore, Md... 274 
Home for Friendless and Destitute Children, Wilmington, 

Del 62 

Home for Friendless and Fallen Women, Boston, Mass 274 

Home for Friendless Children, Easton, Md 78 

Home for Friendless Children, Mt. Vernon, Ohio 110 

Home for Friendless Children, Newport, R. 1 120 

Home for Friendless Children, Reading, Pa 118 

Home for Friendless Children, South Pasadena, Cal 58 

Home for Friendless Children, Wilkesbarre, Pa 118 

Home for Friendless Children of the City and County of 

Lancaster, Lancaster, Pa 114 

Home for Friendless Colored Children, Indianapolis, Ind.. 70 

Home for Friendless Colored Girls, Washington, D. C 268 

Home for Friendless Women, Burlington, Vt 292 

Home for Friendless Women, Leavenworth, Kans 272 

Home for Friendless W^oraen, Louisville, Ky 272 

Home for Friendless Women, Pueblo, Colo 266 

Home for Friendless Women and Children, Brooklyn, N. Y- 280 

Home for Hebrew Orphans, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Home for Homeless Children, Galveston, Tex 122 

Home for Homeless Women, New Orleans, La.' 272 

Home for Homeless Women, Wilkesbarre, Pa 258 

Home for Incurables, Baltimore, Md 234 

Home for Incurables, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Home for Incurables, New York, N. Y 248 

Home for Incurables, Newark, N. J 244 

Home for Little Wanderers, St. Joseph, Mo 86 

Home for Mothers and Infants, Baltimore, Md 274 

Home for Needy Confederate Women, Richmond, Va 262 

Home for Old Men and Aged Couples, New York, N. Y 248 

Home for Orphan and Friendless Children, Huntingdon Pa. 114 

Home for Orphan Girls, Harrisburg, Pa 114 

Home for Orphans of Odd Fellows, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Home for Respectable Women, Albany, N. Y 280 

Home for Scandinavian Immigrants, New York, N. Y 282 

Home for Seamen's Children, New Brighton, Staten Island, 

N.Y 98 

Home for the Aged, Albany, N. Y 244 

Home for the Aged, Allegheny, Pa 254 

Home for the Aged, Baltimore, Md 232 

Home for the Aged, Boston, Mass 234 



318 



INDEX. 



Page. 
Home for the Aged (Bushwick and De Kalb avenues), 

Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Home for the Aged (Eighth avenue and Sixteenth street), 

Brooklyn, N. Y : 246 

Home for the Aged (Herkimer street), Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Home for the Aged (Fullerton and Sheffield avenues), Chi- 
cago, 111 226 

Home for the Aged (Harrison and Throop streets), Chicago, 

111 226 

Home for the Aged (Prairi« avenue), Chicago, 111 226 

Home for the Aged (Chfton Heights), Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Home for the Aged (Montgomery road), Cincinnati, Ohio.. 252 

Home for the Aged, Columbus, Ohio 252 

Home for the Aged, Delaware, Ohio 252 

Home, for the Aged, Des Moines, Iowa 230 

Home for the Aged, Detroit, Mich 238 

Home for the Aged, Easton, Md 234 

Home for the Aged, Elmira, N. Y 246 

Home for the Aged, Evansville, Ind 228 

Home for the Aged, Frederick, Md 234 

Home for the Aged, Grand Eapids, Mich 238 

Home for the Aged, Hudson, N. Y 246 

Home for the Aged, Indianapolis, Ind 228 

Home for the Aged, Jacksonville, Fla 224 

Home for the Aged, Kansas City, Mo 240 

Home for the Aged, Louisville, Ky 230 

Home for the Aged, Milwaukee, Wis 264 

Home for the Aged, Minneapolis, Minn 240 

Home for the Aged, Mobile, Ala 220 

Home for the Aged, New Haven, Conn 222 

Home for the Aged (Johnson and Laharpe streets), New 

Orleans, La 232 

Home for the Aged (Prytania street). New Orleans, La 232 

Home for the Aged (East Seventieth street). New York, 

NY 248 

Home for the Aged ("West One hundred and sixth street). 

New York, N. Y 248 

Home for the Aged, Newark, N. J 244 

Home for the Aged, Paterson, N. J 244 

Home for the Aged, Pawtucket, R. 1 260 

Home for the Aged (Forty-second street and Baltimore ave- 
nue), Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Home for the Aged (German town), Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Home for the Aged (Jefferson and Eighteenth streets), 

Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Home for the Aged (Mt. Vernon street), Philadelphia, Pa.. 256 
Home for the Aged (Cherokee street and Grand avenue), 

St. Louis, Mo 240 

Home for the Aged (Herbert street), St. Louis, Mo 240 

Home for the Aged, St. Paul, Minn 240 

Home for the Aged, San Francisco, Cal 220 

Home for the Aged, Savannah, Ga 224 

Home for the Aged, Somerville, Mass 236 

Home for the Aged, Toledo, Ohio 254 

Home for the Aged, Troy, N. Y 250 

Home for the Aged, Washington, D. C 224 

Home for the Aged, Westminster, Md 234 

Home for the Aged, Wheehng, W. Va 264 

Home for the Aged, Wilmington, Del 222 

Home for the Aged and Infirm, Collingswood, N. J 242 

Home for the Aged of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Bal- 
timore, Md 234 

Home for the Blind, Jersey City, N. J 300 

Home for the Friendless, Atlanta, Ga 268 

Home for the Friendless, Buffalo, N. Y 246 

Home for the Friendless, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 270 

Home for the Friendless, Evansville, Ind 228 

Home for the Friendless, Hannibal, Mo 278 

Home for the Friendless, Harrisburg, Pa 254 

Home for the Friendless, Jackson, Mich 238 

Home for the Friendless, La Crosse, Wis 294 

Home for the Friendless, Logansport, Ind 270 

Home for the Friendless, Macon, Ga 268 

Home for the Friendless, New Haven, Conn 268 

Home for the Friendless, New York, N. Y 100 

Home for the Friendless, Newark, N. J 92 

Home for the Friendless, Newburg, N. Y 102 

Home for the Friendless, Peoria, 111 270 

Home for the Friendless, St. Paul, Minn 278 

• Home for the Friendless, Schenectady, N. Y 250 

Home for the Friendless, Scranton, Pa 290 

Home for the Friendless, Springfield, Mass 276 

Home for the Friendless, Terre Haute, Ind 270 

Home for the Friendless, Williamsport, Pa 258 



Page. 
Home for the Friendlessand Wayne County Jail for Women, 

Richmond, Ind 270 

Home for the Friendless of Northern New York, Plattsburg, 

NY 102 

Home for the Homeless, Manheim, Pa 256 

Home for the Homeless, Oswego, N. Y 250 

Home for the Homeless, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Home for the Homeless, Shreveport, La 232 

Home for the Homeless, Utica, N. Y 250 

Home for the Jewish Aged and Infirm, Cincinnati, Ohio. . . 252 

Home for the Relief of Destitute Blind, New York, N. Y. . . 300 

Home for the Sick, Petersburg, Va 212 

Home for Training in Speech of Deaf Children before they 

are of School Age, Philadelphia, Pa 302 

Home for Widows and Destitute Women, Dayton, Ohio 252 

Home for Widows and Single Women, Lebanon, Pa 256 

Home for Widows and Single Women of Reading, Reading, 

Pa 258 

Home for Worthv Destitute Women and Girls, Morristown, 

N. J 280 

Home Hospital, CarUnville, 111 140 

Home Hospital, Lafayette, Ind 146 

Home League Orphanage, The, Denver, Colo 60 

Home League Orphanage, Victor, Colo 266 

Home of Benevolence, San Jose, Cal 58 

Home of Industry, Brooklyn, N. Y ■ 280 

Home of Industry, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Home of Merciful Rest, Wilmington, Del 222 

Home of Ohio Soldiers, Sailors, and Marines, Madison, Ohio . 252 

Home of the Daughters of Jacob, New York, N. Y 248 

Home of the Friendless, Baltimore, Md 78 

Home of the Friendless, Detroit, Mich 84 

Home of the Friendless, Fond du Lac, Wis 264 

Home of the Friendless, Lexington, Ky 272 

Home of the Friendless, Paducah, Ky 272 

Home of the Friendless, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Home of the Friendless, Spokane, Wash 126 

Home of the Good Samaritan, Newark, N. J 280 

Home of the Good Shepherd, Saratoga Springs, N. Y 284 

Home of the Good Shepherd, Wheeling, W. Va 292 

Home of the Guardian Angel, Los Angeles, Cal 56 

Home of the Holy Family, Cleveland, Ohio . , 108 

Home of the Homeless, Jersey City, N. J 90 

Home of the Innocents, Louisville, Ky 74 

Home of the Jewish Friendless, Chicago, 111 ' 66 

Home of the Little Sisters of the Poor, Pittsburg, Pa 258 

Home of the Merciful Saviour for Crippled Children, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 116 

Home of the Sacred Heart, lona, Minn 84 

Home of the Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary, Villa- 

maria. Pa 118 

Home of the Sorrowful Mother, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Homeopathic Dispensary, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Homeopathic Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich ^ 162 

Homeopathic Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa 148 

Homeopathic Hospital, Newark, N.J 176 

Homeopathic Hospital, Reading, Pa 204 

Homeopathic Hospital, Wilmington, Del 136 

Homeopathic Hospital and Training School, Kansas City, Mo 168 
Homeopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital and Dispen- 
sary, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Homeopathic Medical College Dispensary, St. Louis, Mo . . . 170 

Homeopathic Medical Dispensary, Boston, Mass 156 

Homeopathic Sanatorium , San Francisco, Cal 130 

Homestake Hospital, Lead, S. Dak 208 

Homestead Lodging House, Buffalo, N. Y 282 

Homeward Bound Rescue Mission, Washington, D. C 268 

Homme's Orphan Home and Home for the Aged, Witten- 
berg, Wis 264 

Hope Cottage, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

Hope Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Hope Day Nursery, Providence, R. I 120 

Hope Hall, Flushing, Long Island, N. Y 282 

Hope Hall No. 3, Fort Dodge, Iowa 272 

Hope Hospital, Fort Wayne, Ind 146 

Hope Rescue Mission, Reading, Pa 290 

Hoquiam General Hospital, Hoquiam, Wash 214 

Horace Loving Old Ladies' Home, Nashville, Tenn 260 

Hospital and Dispensary of the Town of Flushing, Flushing, 

NY 182 

Hospital and Training School, Charleston, S. C 208 

Hospital Cottages for Children, Baldwinsville, Mass 156 

Hospital for Children, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Hospital for Consumptives, Baltimore, Md 154 



INDEX. 



319 



Page. 

Hospital for Scarlet Fever and Diphtheria, New York, N. Y. 184 

Hospital for the Home of the Friendless, Baltimore, Md . . . 154 
Hospital for the Relief of Crippled and Deformed Children, 

Baltimore, Md 154 

Hospital for the Relief of the Ruptured and Crippled, New 

York, N. Y 186 

Hospital for the Women of Maryland, Baltimore, Md 154 

Hospital for Women and Children, Newark. N. J 176 

Hospital of St. Anthony de Padua, Chicago,' 111 140 

Hospital of St. Barnabas, Newark, N. J 176 

Hospital of SS. Mary and Ehzabeth, Louisville, Ky 152 

Hospital of the Good Samaritan, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Hospital of the Good Shepherd, Rosemont, Pa 118 

Hospital of the Good Shepherd, Syracuse, N. Y 190 

Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, Philadelphia, 

Pa 202 

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 

Pa 202 

Hospital of the Woman's Medical College, Baltimore, Md.. 154 

Hotel Dieu, Beaumont, Tex 210 

Hotel Dieu, El Paso, Tex 210 

Hotel Dieu, Eureka Springs, Ark 128 

Hotel Dieu, New Orleans, La 152 

House of Calvary, New York, N. Y 248 

House of Detention, Albany, N. Y 94 

House of Divine Providence, Ridgewood, N. J 244 

House of Industry, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

House of Mercy, Boston, Mass 274 

House of Mercy, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

House oi Mercy, Lexington, Ky 272 

House of Mercy, New York, N. Y 282 

House of Mercy, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

House of Mercy, Washington, D. C 268 

House of Mercy Hospital, Pittslield, Mass 160 

House of Providence, Chicago, 111 270 

House of Providence, Syracuse, N. Y 104 

House of Providence, Vancouver, Wash 264 

House of Providence Hospital, Holyoke, Mass 160 

House of Providence Infant Asylum, Detroit, Mich 84 

House of Providence Maternity Hospital, Detroit, Mich 164 

House of Refuge, San Antonio, Tex 292 

House of Rest for Consumptives, New York, N. Y 248 

House of Rest for the Aged, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

House of St. Giles the Cripple, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

House of St. Michael and All Angels, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

House of Shelter, Albany, N. Y 280 

House of the Angel Guardian, Boston, Mass 80 

House of the Annunciation, New York, N. Y 100 

House of the Good Samaritan, Boston, Mass. 156 

House of the Good Samaritan, Watertown, N. Y 190 

House of the Good Sheplirnl, Albany, N. Y 280 

House of the Good Sh.'^hrrd, Allegheny, Pa 288 

House of the Gooil Shoiilu'id, Baltimore, Md , 274 

House of the Good Shepherd, Bingham ton, N. Y 244 

House of the Good Shepherd, Boston, Mass 274 

House of the Good Shepherd, Brooklyn, N. Y 280 

House of the Good Shepherd, Carthage, Ohio 286 

House of the Good Shepherd, Chicago, 111 270 

House of the Good Shepherd (Baum street), Cincinnati, 

Ohio 286 

House of the Good Shepherd (Warsaw and Grand avenues). 

Cincinnati, Ohio -. 286 

House of the Good Shepherd, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

•House of the Good Shepherd, Columbus, Ohio 286 

House of the Good Shepherd, Denver, Colo 266 

House of the Good Shepherd, Detroit, Mich 276 

House of the Good Shepherd, Dubuque, Iowa 272 

House of the Good Shepherd, Gardiner, Me 76 

House of the Good Shepherd, Green Bay, Wis 294 

House of the Good Shepherd, Hartford, Conn 266 

House of the Good Shepherd, Helena, Mont 278 

House of the Good Shepherd, Indianapolis, Ind 270 

House of the Good Shepherd, Kansas City, Mo 278 

House of the Good Shepherd (Eighth street), Louisville, Ky. 272 
House of the Good Shepherd (Twenty-third and Bank 

streets), Louisville, Ky , 272 

House of the Good Shepherd, Memphis, Tenn 290 

House of the Good Shepherd, Milwaukee, Wis 294 

House of the Good Shepherd, New York, N. Y 282 

House of the Good Shepherd, Newark, N. J 280 

House of the Good Shepherd, Newport, Ky 272 

House of the Good Shepherd, Omaha, Nebr 278 

House of the Good Shepherd, Orange, N. J 280 

House of the. Good Shepherd, Peoria, 111 270 



Page. 
House of the Good Shepherd (Fairmount avenue and Thirty- 
fifth street) , Philadelphia, Pa 288 

House of the Good Shepherd (Germantown), Philadelphia, 

Pa 288 

House of the Good Shepherd, Portland, Oreg 286 

House of the Good Shepherd, Reading, Pa 290 

House of the Good Shepherd, St. Paul, Minn 278 

House of the Good Shepherd, Scran ton, Pa 290 

House of the Good Shepherd, Seattle, Wash 292 

House of the Good Shepherd, Springfield, Mass 276 

House of the Good Shepherd, Utica, N. Y 104 

House of the Good Shepherd, Washington, D. C 268 

House of the Good Shepherd for Colored Girls, Baltimore, Md. 274 

House of the Guardian Angel, St. Louis, Mo 86 

House of the Holy Child, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

House of the Holy Comforter, New Brighton, Staten Island, 

NY 98 

House of the Holy Comforter, New York, N. Y 248 

House of the Holy Family, New York, N. Y 282 

Houston Infirmary Sanitarium, Houston, Tex 210 

Howard Hospital and Infirmarv for Incurables, Philadel- 
phia, Pa ' 202 

Howard Institution, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Howard Mission and Home for Little Wanderers, New York, 

N.Y 100 

Hudelson Home, Ewing, 111 66 

Hudson City Hospital, Hudson, N. Y 182 

Hudson County Catholic Protectory, Kearney, N. J 90 

Hudson County Smallpox Hospital, Secaucus, N. J. 178 

Hudson Orphan and Relief Association, Hudson, N. Y 98 

Hull House Day Nursery, Chicago, 111 66 

Humane Society Home, Troy, N. Y 104 

Hunt Asylum for Destitute Children, Boston, Mass 80 

Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W. Va 216 

Huntress Home, Gloucester, Mass 236 

Hurlbutt Orphans' Home, Kelsey ville, Cal 56 

Idaho Soldiers' Home, Boise, Idaho 226 

Illinois Central Railroad Hospital, Paducah, Ky 152 

Illinois Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary, Chicago, 111 140 

Illinois College Hospital, Chicago, 111 ,. 140 

Illinois Industrial Home for the Bhnd, Chicago, 111 296 

Illinois Institution for the Education of the Blind, Jackson- 
ville, 111 296 

Illinois Manual Training School Farm, Glenwood, 111 66 

Illinois Masonic Home, Sullivan, 111 228 

Illinois Masonic Orphans' Home, Chicago, 111 66 

Illinois School for the Deaf, Jacksonville, 111 296 

Illinois Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Quincy, 111 226 

Illinois Soldiers' Orphans' Home, Normal, 111. 68 

Immaculate Conception Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Immaculate Conception Girls' Asylum, New Orleans, La. . . 74 

Immanuel Hospital, Omaha, Nebr 174 

Immanuel Orphans' Home, Omaha, Nebr 88 

Immigrant Girls' Home, New York, N. Y 282 

Immigrant Home, Boston, Mass - . . 274 

Improved Order of Red Men's Home, Cheltenham, Pa 254 

Indiana Children's Receiving Home, Westfield, Ind 72 

Indiana Institution for the Education of the Blind, Indian- 
apolis, Ind 296 

Indiana Institution for the Education of the Deaf and Dumb, 

Indianapolis, Ind 296 

Indiana Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans' Home, Knightstown, 

Ind 70 

Indianapolis City Hospital, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

Indianapohs Day Nursery, Indianapolis, Ind 70 

IndianapolisHomefor Friendless Women, Indianapolis, Ind. 270 

Indianapolis Orphan Asylum, Indianapolis, Ind 70 

Indigent Widows and Single Women's Home, Philadelphia, 

Pa 256 

Indigent Widows and Single Women's Home, Trenton, N. J . 244 

Industrial and Training School, Hot Springs, Ark 56 

Industrial Christian Alliance Temporary Home, New York, 

NY 282 

Industrial Home, Columbia, S. C 120 

Industrial Home and School, Greeneville, Tenn 122 

Industrial Home for the Adult Blind, Oakland, Cal 296 

Industrial Home for the Blind, Brooklyn, N. Y 300 

Industrial Home of the City of Kingston, Kingston, N. Y. . 98 
Industrial School and Hygiene Home for the Friendless, 

Hillsboro, Kans 72 

Industrial School for Catholic Orphan Boys, Mobile, Ala. . . 56 

Industrial School for Girls, Boston, Mass 80 

Industrial School of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y . . 102 



320 



INDEX. 



Page. 

Industrial Training School for Girls, Denver, Colo 266 

Infant Asylum of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Manchester, 

N. H 88 

Infant Jesus Creche, New Orleans, La 74 

Infant Jesus Dav Nursery, Buffalo, N. Y 96 

Infants' Home, Houston, Tex 122 

Ingleside, The, Revere, Mass 276 

Ingleside Home, Buffalo, N. Y 282 

Ingleside Home, Topeka, Kans 230 

Institute for the Deaf and Dumb, Guthrie, Okla 302 

Institution of Mercy, New York, N. Y 100 

International and Great Northern Railroad Hospital, Pales- 
tine, Tex 210 

International School for the Blind and Deaf, Fort Gibson, 

Ind. T 296 

Invalids' Home, Keene, N. H 242 

lola Orphans' Home, lola, Kans 7^ 

Iowa Children' s Home, Des Moines, Iowa 72 

Iowa Home for the Friendless, Dubuque, Iowa 272 

Iowa Methodist Hospital, Des Moines, Iowa 148 

Iowa Odd Fellows and Orphans' Home, Mason City, Iowa . 230 

Iowa Sanitarium, Des Moines, Iowa 148 

Iowa School for the Blind, Vinton, Iowa 298 

Iowa School for the Deaf, Council Bluffs, Iowa 298 

Iowa Soldiers' Home, Marshalltown, Iowa 230 

Iowa Soldiers' Orphans' Home, Davenport, Iowa 72 

Isaac T. Hopper Home, New York, N. Y 282 

Isabella Heimath, New York, N. Y 248 

Ishpeming H ospital, Ishpeming, Mich 164 

Italian Benevolent Institute and Dispensary, New York, 

N. Y 282 

Italian Industrial School Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa . . . 116 

Italian Protectory, Kearney, N.J 90 

Ithaca Children's Home, Ithaca, N. Y 98 

J. Clement French Industrial Home for Men, Newark, N. J. 280 

J. Hood Wright Memorial Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

J. Lewis Crozer Home for Incurables, Upland, Pa 258 

J. Lewis Crozer Llomeopathic Hospital, Upland, Pa 206 

J. M. Gusky Orphanage and Home, Allegheny, Pa 112 

Jackson City Hospital, Jackson, Mich 164 

Jackson Orphanage, Norfolk, Va 124 

Jackson Sanatorium, Jackson, Miss 168 

Jamaica Hospital, Jamaica, Long Island, N. Y 182 

Jamaica Plain Dispensary, Boston, Mass 156 

James C. Smith Memorial Home, Oakbourne, Pa 288 

James Moorman Orphans' Home, Winchester, Ind 72 

James Walker Memorial Hospital, Wilmington, N. C 192 

James White Memorial Home, Battle Creek, Mich 238 

Jane C. Stormont Hospital, Topeka, Kans 150 

Jane D. Kent Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Jane Kellogg Home for Old Ladies, Little Rock, Ark 220 

Jane McAlister Hospital, Waukegan, 111 144 

Japanese Hospital, Pocatello, Idaho 138 

Jay Street Day Nursery, Newark, N.J 92 

Jean Martin Brown Receiving Home, St. Paul, Minn 86 

Jeanne d' Arc Home for Friendless French Girls, New York, 

N. Y - 282 

Jefferson County Children's Home, Madis ,, Ind 70 

Jefferson County Orphan Asylum, Watertown, N. Y 104 

Jefferson Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Jefferson Maternity Hosi^ital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Jefferson Medical College Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Jeffersonville Deaconess Hospital, Jeffersonville, Ind 146 

Jeffersonville Orphans' Home, Jeffersonville, Ind 70 

Jenkins' Orphanage, Charleston, S. C. .■ 120 

Jenkintown Day Nurserj', Jenkintown, Pa 114 

Jennie Clarkson Home for Children, Katonah, N. Y 98 

Jersey City Hospital, Jersey City, N. J 176 

Jewell Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Jewish Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Jewish Foster Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 106 

Jewish Foster Home and Orphan Asylum, The, Philadel- 
phia, Pa 116 

Jewish Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Jewish Hosjpital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Jewish Hospital Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Jewish Infant Orphans' Home, Cleveland, (.)hio 108 

Jewish Maternity Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Jewish Orphan Asylum, Cleveland, Ohio 108 

Jewish Orphan Asylum Association of Western New York, 

Rochester, N. Y 102 

Jewish Orphans' Home, New Orleans, La 76 



Page. 

Jewish Shelter Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

Jewish Sheltering Home, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Job Haines Home for Aged People, Bloomfield, N. J 242 

John C. Mercer Home, Ambler, Pa 254 

John Howard Industrial Home, Boston, Mass 274 

John M. Hunt Home, Nashua, N. H 242 

John Mclntire Children's Home, Zanesville, Ohio 112 

John N. Norton Memorial Infirmary, Louisville, Ky 152 

John Sealy Hospital, Galveston, Tex 210 

John Stuart Ryburn Memorial Hospital, Ottawa, 111 144 

John Tennant Memorial Home, The, Pacific Grove, Cal 220 

John Wells Memorial Hospital, New Brunswick, N. J 176 

Johns Hopkins Colored Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md... 78 

Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md 154 

Johnson County Orphans' Home, Franklin, Ind 68 

Johnson Home, Seneca Falls, N. Y 250 

Johnston Emergency Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 216 

Jones Memorial Clinic and Amity Dispensary, New York, 

NY 186 

Jones School and Home for Friendless Children, Cleveland, 

Ohio 108 

Jordan Hospital, Plymouth, Mass 160 

Josephinum Orphanage, San Jose, Cal 58 

Julia E. Work Training School, Plymouth, Ind 70 

Julia F. Burnham Hospital, Champaign, 111 140 

Julia Parkman Jones Benevolent Home, Macon, Ga 224 

Juliette Fowler Orphans and Widows' Home, Grand Prairie, 

Tex 260 

Julius Weis Home for Aged and Infirm, New Orleans, La.. 232 

Juvenile Detention Home, Chicago, 111 r 66 

Kalamazoo Hospital, Kalamazoo, Mich 164 

Kalamazoo Medical and Surgical Sanitarium, Kalamazoo, 

Mich 164 

Kallman Scandinavian Orphanage, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Kane Summit Hospital, Kane, Pa 200 

Kansas City Boys' Orphan Home, Kansas City, Mo 86 

Kansas City Day Nursery, Kansas City, Mo 86 

Kansas City Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 168 

Kansas Masonic Home, Wichita, Kans 230 

Kansas School for the Deaf, Olathe, Kans 298 

Kansas State Protective Home, Leavenworth, Kans 230 

Kansas State School for the Bhnd, Kansas City, Kans 298 

Kansas State Soldiers' Home, Fort Dodge, Kans 230 

Kaspare Cohn Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Kearney Public Hospital, Kearney, Nebr 174 

Kearns St. Ann's Orphan Asylum, Salt Lake City, Utah . . . 124 

Kelso Home, Baltimore, Md 78 

Kenosha Hospital, Kenosha, Wis 216 

Kensington Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Kensington Hospital for Women, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Kentucky Confederate Home, Pewee Valley, Ky 230 

Kentucky Female Orphan School, Midway, Ky 74 

Kentucky Industrial Home Shelter, Louisville, Ky 272 

Kentucky Institution for the Blind, Louisville, Ky 298 

Kentucky School for the Deaf, Danville, Ky '. 298 

Kentucky School of Medicine, Hospital and Dispensary, 

Louisville, Ky ! . 152 

Keokuk Emergency Hospital, Keokuk, Iowa 148 

Keokuk Medical College Free Dispensary, Keokuk, Iowa. . . 148 

Kessler Hospital, Clarksburg, W. Va 214 

King County Hospital, Georgetown, Wash 214 

King County Industrial School, Seattle, Wash 126 

Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

King's Daughters and Sons' Home for the Aged, Pondville, 

Mass - - . . . 236 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery, Los Angeles, Cal 56 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery, Savannah, Ga 64 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery, Wheeling, W. Va 126 

King's Daughters' Day Nursery and Children's Home, 

Nashua, N. H 90 

King' s Daughters' Home, Bangor, Me 272 

King's Daughters' Home, Greenville, Miss 168 

King's Daughters' Home for Incurables, San Francisco, Cal. 220 

King's Daughters' Home for Women, Springfield, 111 228 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Ashland, Ky 150 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Frankfort, Ky 150 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Madison, Ind 146 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Martinsburg, W. Va 216 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Portsmouth, Va 212 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Staunton, Va 214 

King's Daughters' Hospital, Temple, Tex 210 

King's Daughters' Shelter, Buffalo, N. Y 282 



INDEX. 



321 



Kingston Avenue Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Kips Bay Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Kittanning General Hospital, Kittanning, Pa 200 

Knox County General Hospital, Eockland, Me 154 

Knox County Orphan Asylum, Vincennes, Ind 70 

Knoxville General Hospital, Knoxville, Tenn 208 

L. and L. Mott Home, South Hero, Vt 124 

L. L. Culver Union Hospital, Crawfordsville, Ind 146 

La Crosse Lutheran Hospital, La Crosse, Wis 216 

La Crosse Public Hospital, La Crosse, Wis 216 

Ladies' Hospital, Deming, N. Mex 178 

Ladies' Hospital Association, Port Chester, N. Y 188 

Ladies of the G. A. R. Home, Anoka, Minn 240 

Ladies of the G. A. E. Home, Pittsburg, Pa 258 

Lake Park Orphans' Home, Lake Park, Minn 84 

Lake Superior General Hospital, Lake Linden, Mich. 164 

Lake View Hospital, Danville, 111 142 

Lake View Hospital, Port Arthur, Tex. . . : 210 

Lakeside General Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 218 

Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Lamar Hospital ( colored ) , Augusta, Ga 138 

Lancaster General Hospital, Lancaster, Pa 200 

Lane Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Lansing Hospital, Lansing, Mich 164 

Larkin Children's Home, Elgin, 111 66 

Las Vegas Hospital, Las Vegas, N. Mex 178 

Laura Franklin Free Hospital for Children, New York, N. Y . 186 

Lawrence County Children's Home, Ironton, Ohio 110 

Lawrence General Hospital, Lawrence, Mass 160 

Lawrence Home for Aged People, Lawrence, Mass 236 

Lawrence Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Lay ton Home, Wilmington, Del 224 

Leake and Watts Orphan House, Yonkers, N. Y 104 

Leamy Home, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Leath Orphan Asylum, Memphis, Tenn 122 

Leavenworth Hospital, Leavenworth, Kans 150 

Lebanon Hospital and Dispensary, New York, N. Y 186 

Le Couteulx St. Mary's Institution for the Improved Instrac- 

tion of Deaf-Mutes, Buffalo, N. Y 300 

Lee Camp Soldiers' Home, Richmond, Va 262 

Lekier Old Folks' Home, Norfolk, Va 262 

Leland Home, Waltham, Mass 238 

Lenont Hospital, Virginia, Minn 168 

Lenthall Home for Widows, Washington, D. C 224 

LeoHouse for German Catholic Immigrants, New York, N.Y. 282 

Leominster Home for Old Ladies, Leominster, Mass 236 

Leonard Hospital, Troy, N.Y 190 

Leonard Medical School Hospital, Raleigh, N. C 192 

Leonard Morse Hospital, Natick, Mass 160 

Leonard Street Orphans' Home, Atlanta, Ga 62 

Leopold Morse Home and Orphanage, Boston, Mass 234 

Lepers' Home, New Orleans, La 232 

Leslie Hospital, Superior, Wis 218 

Letitia Rosenberg Woman's Home, Galveston, Tex 292 

Levering Hospital, Hannibal, Mo 168 

Lewis Hospital, Bay City, Mich 162 

Lewiston Homefor Aged Women, Lewiston, Me 232 

Lexington Orphan Asylum, Lexington, Ky 74 

Licking County Children's Home, Jfewark, Ohio 110 

Lida Baldwin's Infants' Rest, Cleveland, Ohio 108 

Life Boat Rest and Suburban Home for Girls, Chicago, 111. . 270 

Light and Hope Mission, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

Light and Hope Orphanage, Birmingham, Ohio 106 

Lima Hospital, Lima, Ohio 196 

Lincoln City Hospital, Lincoln, Nebr 174 

Lincoln Hosi3ital, Durham, N. C 192 

Lincoln Hospital, Lincoln, N. H 174 

Lincoln Hospital and Home, New York, N.Y 186 

Lincoln Institution, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Lincoln Old Folks and Orphans' Home, Springfield, 111 228 

Linden House, Baltimore, Md 78 

Lindley Training School, Asheville, N. C 284 

Lindsay Church Home, Quincy, 111 226 

Lisa Day Nursery, New York, N.Y 100 

Lisbon Hospital, Lisbon, N. Dak 192 

Litchfield County Hospital, Winsted, Conn 136 

Little Falls Hospital, Little Falls, N.Y 184 

Little Missionary's Day Nursery, New York, N.Y 100 

Little Star Children's Home, Spickardsville, Mo 88 

Liversidge Institution of Industry, Boston, Mass 80 

Loats' Orphan Asylum, Frederick, Md 78 

Lock Haven Hospital, Lock Haven, Pa 200 

30952—05 21 



Page. 

Lockport Home for the Friendle.ss, Lockport, N.Y 98 

Lockwood Hospital, Petoskey, Mich ; . 164 

Lodging House for Homeless Women, Brooklyn, X. Y 280 

Loga.n County Children's Home, Bellefontaine, Ohio 106 

Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, N.Y 180 

Long Island Odd Fellows' Home, Brooklyn, N.Y 246 

Long Island Throat Hospital and Eye Infirmary, Brooklyn, 

N. Y 1 ■. . . 180 

Loomis Sanatorium and Annex, Liberty, N. Y 184 

Lorain County Children's Home, Oberlin, Ohio 110 

Loretto Home, Rutland, Vt 262 

Los Angeles County Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Los Angeles Hospital, The, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Los Angeles Infirmary, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Los Angeles Orphan Asylum and School ; Los Angeles, Cal. . 56 

Louise Home, Washington, D. C 224 

Louise Short Bapti.st Home, Evergreen, Ala 56 

Louisiana Baptist Orphanage, Lake Charles, La . 74 

Louisiana Institute for the Blind, Baton Rouge, La 298 

Louisiana Institute for the Deaf and Dumb, Baton Rouge, La . 298 
Louisiana Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, 

New Orleans, La 76 

Louisville Baptist Orphans' Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

Louisville City Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

Louisville Medical College Infirmary, Louisville, Ky 152 

Louisville Presbyterian Orphans' Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

Lowell Day Nursery, Lowell, Mass 82 

Lowell Emergency Hospital, Lowell, Mass 160 

Lowell General Hospital, Lowell, Mass 160 

Lucas County Children's Home, Maumee, Ohio 110 

Lucian Moss Home for Incurables, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Lucile Orphans' Home, Leitchfield, Ky 74 

Lutheran Children's Home, Wauwatosa, Wis 126 

Lutheran Church Home for the Aged and Infirm of Buffalo, 

Buffalo, N. Y 246 

Lutheran Eye, Ear, and Throat Infirmary, Washington, D. C. 136 

Lutheran Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Lutheran Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Lutheran Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Lutheran Orphan Asylum, Lamberton, Minn 84 

Lutheran Orphan Home, Salem, Va 124 

Lutheran Orphans' Home, Toledo, Ohio 112 

Lutheran Orphans' Home, Topton, Pa 118 

Lutheran Orphans' Home and Asylum for the Aged and 

Infirm, Philadelphia, Pa ". 256 

Lutheran Pilgrim House, New York, N.Y 282 

Lying-in Hospital of the City of New York, New York, N. Y . 186 

Lynchburg Female Orphan Asylum, Lynchburg, Va 124 

Lynn Home for Aged Women, Lynn, Mass 236 

Lynn Hospital, Lynn, Mass 160 

Lynn Hospital for Contagious Diseases, Lynn, Mass 160 

Lynn Workingmen's Home, Lynn, Mass 276 

McAlester Memorial Episcopal Church Home,Lexington,Ky. 230 

McCowen Oral School for Young Deaf Children, Chicago, 111. 296 

McDowell County Snmllpox Hospital, North Fork, W. Va. . 216. 

McGregor Mission, Dcfn.it, Mich 276 

McKees Rocks General bi-i.ital, McKees Rocks, Pa 200 

McKeesport Hospital, Ai .. 1"- ^'^■sport, Pa 200 

McKinley Industrial H ome, Gardena, Cal 56 

McKinley Orphanage, The, San Francisco, Cal 58 

Macon Hospital, Macon, Ga 138 

Madison County Children's Home, London, Ohio 110 

Madison County Children's Home, Peterboro, N.Y 102 

Madison County Orphans' Home, Anderson, Ind 68 

Madison General Hospital, Madison, Wis 216 

Magdalen Asylum, San Francisco, Cal 266 , 

Magdalen Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Mahoning County Children's Home, Youngstown, Ohio ... 112 

Mahoning Valley Hospital, Youngstown, Ohio 198 

Maine Children' s Home, Augusta, Me 76 

Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary, Portland, Me 154 

Maine General Hospital, Portland, Me 154 

Maine Home for Friendless Boys, Portland, Me 76 

Maine School for the Deaf, Portland, Me 298 

Maison Hospitaliere, New Orleans, La 232 

Maiden Home for Aged Persons, Maiden, Mass 236 

Maiden Hospital, Maiden, Mass 160 

Maiden Industrial Aid Society Day Nursery, Maiden, Mass. 82 

Manayunk Eye and Ear Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Manchester Children's Home, Manchester, N. H 88 

Manhattan Eve and Ear Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

Margaret Etter Creche, Chicago, 111 66 



322 



INDEX. 



Page. 

Margaret Pillsbury General Hospital, Concord, N. H 174 

Margaret Smith Home, Richmond, Ind 228 

Margaret Strachan Home, New York, N. Y 282 

Marguerite Home, Sacramento, Cal 220 

Maria Kip Orphanage, San Francisco, Cal 58 

Mariae Consilii School for the Deaf, St. Louis, Mo 300 

Marie Beard Deaconess Hospital, Spokane, Wash 214 

Marie Creche, Chicago, 111 66 

Marienheim, The, Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Mariners' Family Asylum, Clifton, Staten Island, N. Y 246 

Mariners' House, Boston, Mass 274 

Marion County Children's Home, Marion, Ohio 110 

Marion County Surgical Hospital, Ocala, Fla 136 

Marshall Infirmary, Troy, N. Y. i 190 

Marshall Lodge Home and Ketreat, Lynchburg, Va 212 

Martha and Maria Orphan Asylum, Poulsbo, Wash 126 

Martha Parsons Free Hospital for Children, St. Louis, Mo. . 170 

Martha Wilson Iloiiic, ;Mt. N'l'rnon, N. Y 248 

Martin Luther Orphan lloinc, Boston, Mass 80 

Martin Luther Orphans' Ihinie, Stoughton, Wis 126 

Mary Brown Home, Portland, Me - 272 

Mary Day Nursery, Akron, Ohio 106 

Mary F. Ballentiiie Home for the Aged, Norfolk, Va 262 

Mary Fisher Home, New York, N. Y 248 

Mary Fisher Home, Tenafly, N. J 244 

Mary Fletcher Hospital, Burhngton, Vt 212 

Mary Galloway Home, Memphis, Tenn 260 

Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Hanover, N. H 174 

Mary Immaculate Hospital, Jamaica, Long Island, N. Y... 182 

Mary J. Drexel Home, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Mary K. Williams Home for Orphans, Frankfort, Ky . . 74 

Mary Louise Heins Home, Mt. Vernon, N. Y " 248 

Mary M. Packer Hospital, Sunbury, Pa 206 

Mary R. Smith's Cottages, Oakland, Cal 220 

Mary Thompson Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Mary Warren Home, Augusta, Ga 224 

Mary Washington Hospital, Fredericksburg, Va 212 

Maryland Baptist Orphanage and Home for Colored Chil- 
dren, Baltimore, Md 78 

Maryland General Hospital, Baltimore, Md 154 

Maryland Home for Friendless Colored Children, Baltimore, 

Md 78 

Maryland Homeopathic Hospital and Free Dispensary, Balti- 
more, Md 154 

Maryland Line Confederate Soldiers' Home, Pikesville, Md. 234 

Maryland Lying-in Hospital, Baltimore, Md 154 

Maryland School for Colored Blind and Deaf, Baltimore, 

Md 298 

Maryland School for the Blind, Baltimore, Md 298 

Maryland School for the Deaf and Dumb, Frederick, Md. . . 298 

Maryland University Hospital, Baltimore, Md 154 

Masonic Home, Fort Worth, Tex 260 

Masonic Home, Manchester, N. H 242 

Masonic Home, "\Vallingford, Conn 222 

Masonic Home and School, Utica, N. Y 250 

Masonic Home of Missouri, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Masonic Home of New Jersey, Burlington, N. J 242 

Masonic Home of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Masonic Home of Virginia, Richmond, Va. . . . „ 124 

Masonic Industrial School and Widows and Orphans' Home, 

Americus, Ga 224 

Masonic Widows and Orphans' Home, Decoto, Cal 220 

Masonic Widows and Orphans' Home, Nashville, Tenn 260 

Masonic Widows and Orphans' Home and Iirfirmarv, Louis- 
ville, Ky ". 230 

Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston, 

Mass 158 

Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass ] 58 

Massachusetts Home for Intemperate Women, Boston, Mass. 274 

Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

Massachusetts Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates, 

Foxboro, Mass 158 

Massachusetts Hospital for Epileptics, Palmer, Mass 160 

Massachusetts Infant Asylum, Boston, Mass 80 

Massachusetts State Sanatorium, Rutland, Mass 160 

Mater Misericordiae Home, Sacramento, Cal 220 

Mater Misericordiae Hospital, Sacramento, Cal 130 

Maternity Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

Maternity Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn 166 

Maternitv Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Maternity H ispital, Toledo, Ohio 196 

Mattie Rhodes' Day Nursery, Kansas City, Mo 86 

Mavville Union Hospital, Mayville, N. Dak 192 

Meadville City Hospital, Meadville, Pa 200 



Page. 

Medford Home for Aged Men and Women, Medford, Mass . 236 

Medical Agency, Baltimore, Md 154 

Medico-Chirurgical Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Meigs County Children's Home, Pomeroy, Ohio 110 

Melrose Hospital, Melrose, Mass 160 

Memorial Day Nursery, Hoboken, N.J 90 

Memorial Day Nursery, Paterson, N. J 92 

Memorial Dispensary, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Memorial Home, New Orleans, La 272 

Memorial Home, St. Joseph, Mo 240 

Memorial Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Memorial Home for Crippled Children, Pittsburg, Pa . . 118 

Memorial Hospital, Mt. Pleasant, Pa 200 

Memorial Hospital, New London, Conn 134 

Memorial Hospital, Orange, N. J 176 

Memorial Hospital, Richmond, Va 212 

Memorial Hospital, Worcester, Mass 162 

MemorialHospitalforWomenand Children, Brooklyn, N. Y. 180 

Memphis City Hospital, Memphis, Tenn * 208 

Memphis Day Nursery and Half Orphanage, Memphis, Tenn. 122 

Memphis Home for Aged Men, Memphis, Tenn 260 

Mennonite Home, Frederick, Pa 254 

Mennonite Old People's Home, Rittman, Ohio 254 

Mennonite Orphans' Home, West Liberty, Ohio 112 

Menominee Indian Hospital, Keshena, Wis 216 

Mercer Hospital, Trenton, N. J 178 

Mercy Home, Birmingham, Ala 266 

Mercy Home, Chicago, 111 270 

Mercy Home, Los Angeles, Cal 220 

Mercy Hospital, Bay City, Mich 162 

Mercy Hospital, Benton Harbor, Mich 162 

Mercy Hospital, Big Rapids, Mich 162 

Mercy Hospital, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 148 

Mercy Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Mercy Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Mercy Hospital, Council Bluffs, Iowa 148 

Mercy Hospital, Davenport, Iowa 148 

Mercy Hospital, Denver, Colo 132 

Mercy Hospital, Des Moines, Iowa 148 

Mercy Hospital, Detroit, Mich 164 

Mercy Hospital, Fort Scott, Kans 150 

Mercy Hospital, Hamilton, Ohio 196 

Mercy Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa 148 

Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Mo . _ 170 

Mercy Hospital, Laredo, Tex 210 

Mercy Hospital, Muskegon, Mich 164 

Mercy Hospital, Nashville, Tenn 208 

Mercy Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Mercy Hospital, Prescott, Ariz 128 

Mercy Hospital, South McAlester, Ind. T 144 

Mercy Hospital, Springfield, Mass 162 

Mercy Hospital, Wilkesbarre, Pa 206 

Mercy Hospital and 1 1 omc, ( 'ouncil Bluffs, Iowa 228 

Mercy Hospital and Sanitarium, Manistee, Mich 164 

Mercy Orphan Asy Inni, Fort Scott, Kans 72 

Meriden Hospital, The, Meriden, Conn 134 

Merriam Home, Newton, N. J 244 

Messiah Home for Children, New York, N. Y 100 

Messiah Rescue and Benevolent Home, Harrisburg, Pa 254 

Messiah Universalist Home, Philadelphia, Pa 256 

Methodist Deaconess Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal 130 

Methodist Deaconess Orphanage and Epworth Children's 

Home, Lake Bluff, 111 66 

Methodist Episcopal Church Home, New York, N. Y 248 

Methodist Ejiiscopal Home for the Aged, Philadelphia, Pa. 258 

Metli..,liHt K|,iM'opal Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Methodist iM.iscopal Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, 

Pa : 202 

Methodist Episcopal Old People's Home, Chicago, 111 226 

Methodist Episcopal Orphanage, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Methodist Female Orphan Asvlum, Petersburg, Va 124 

Methodist Home, The, Washington, D. C 224 

Methodist Home for the Aged, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Methodi-t Orphanage, Raleigh, N. C 106 

MetlKidist ( )rphanage, Richmond, Va 124 

Metlio.list Orphanage, Waco, Tex 122 

MethodisI Orphans' Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

Methodist Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo 86 

Metropolitan Children's Home, Chicago, 111 66 

Metropolitan Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

Metropohtan Hospital and Dispensary, New York, N. Y... 186 

Metropolitan Throat Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

Metuchen Home, Metuchen, N. J 244 

Miami County Children's Home, Troy, Ohio 112 



INDEX. 



323 



Page. 

Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio. 196 

Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Michigan Children'sHomeSociety Hospital, St. Joseph, Mich. 166 

Michigan Masonic Home, Grand Rapids, Mich 238 

Michigan School for the Blind, Lansing, Mich 298 

Michigan School for the Deaf, FHnt, Mich 298 

Michigan Soldiers' Home, Grand Rapids, Mich 238 

Michigan State Public School, Coldwater, Mich 84 

Middlesex County Emergency and General Hospital, Wo- 

burn, Mass 162 

Middlesex County Temporary Home, Haddam, Conn 60 

Middlesex Hospital, Middletown, Conn 134 

Middlesworth Home, Shelbvville, 111 68 

Midnight Mission, Philadelishia, Pa 288 

Milford Hospital, Milford, Mass 160 

Milliken Memorial Hospital, New Orleans, La 152 

Milton Convalescent Home, Milton, Mass 276 

Milwaukee Children's Free Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 218 

Milwaukee County Home for Dependent Children, Wauwa- 

tosa, Wis 126 

Milwaukee County Hospital, Wauwatosa, Wis 218 

Milwaukee Health Department Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis.. 218 

Milwaukee Home for the Friendless, Milwaukee, Wis 294 

Milwaukee Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 218 

Milwaukee House of Mercy, Milwaukee, Wis 294 

Milwaukee Infants' Home, Milwaukee, Wis 126 

Milwaukee Orphans' Asylum, Milwaukee, Wis 126 

Milwaukee Protestant Home for the Aged, Milwaukee, Wis. 264 

Milwaukee Rescue Mission, Milwaukee, Wis 294 

Miners' Hospital No. 1, Welch, W. Va 216 

Miners' Hospital No. 2, McKendree, W. Va 216 

Miners' Hospital No. 3, Fairmont, W. Va 214 

Minneapolis City Hospital, Minaeapolis, Minn 166 

Minnequa Hospital, Pueblo, Colo 134 

Minnesota Odd Fellows' Home, Northfield, Minn 240 

Minnesota School for the Blind, Faribault, Minn 298 

Minnesota School for the Deaf, Faribault, Minn 298 

Minnesota Soldiers' Home, Minneapolis, Minn 240 

Minnesota State Public School, Owatonna, Minn 84 

Minquadale Home, Wilmington, Del 224 

Misericordia Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

Mishawaka Orphans' Home, Mishawaka, Ind 70 

Mission Free School of the Church of the Messiah, St. 

Louis, Mo 86 

Mission Hospital, Asheville, N. C 192 

Mission of Our Lady of Mercy, Chicago, 111 66 

Mission of Our Lady of the Rosary, New York, N. Y 282 

Mission of the Immaculate Virgin, New York, N. Y 100 

Mississippi Baptist Orphanage, Jackson, Miss 86 

Mississippi Institution for the Blind, Jackson, Miss 298 

Mississippi Institution for the Education of the Deaf and 

Dumb, Jackson, Miss 298 

Mississippi Orphans' Home, Water Valley, Miss.' 86 

Mississippi State Charity Hospital, Vicksburg, Miss. . .' 168 

Missouri Baptist Sanitarium, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad Hospital, Sedalia, Mo. 172 

Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 170 

Missouri Pacific Railway Hospital , St. Louis, Mo 170 

Missouri School for the Blind, St. Louis, Mo 300 

Missouri School for the Deaf, Fulton, Mo .300 

Mitchell Hospital, LeavenAvorth, Kans 1.50 

Mitchell-Thomas Hospital, Springfield, Ohio ] 96 

Moline Public Hospital, Moline, 111 144 

Monmouth Memorial Hospital, Long Branch, N. J 176 

Monongahela Memorial Hospital, Monongahela, Pa 200 

Monroe City Hospital, ^lonme. La 152 

Monroe County Cliildivn's Home, Woodsfleld, Ohio 112 

Monroe County Isolation llo.-^pital. Key West, Fla 136 

Monroe Harding •Memorial Orphanage, Nashville, Tenn 122 

Montana Deaconess Hospital, Great Falls, Mont 172 

Montana School for the Deaf and Blind, Boulder, Mont 300 

Montana Soldiers' Home, Columbia Falls, Mont 242 

Montetiore Home, New York, N. Y 186 

Montefiore Home Country Sanitarium, Bedford, N. Y ISO 

Montgomery County (children's Home, Dayton, Ohio 108 

Montgomery County Orphans' Home, Crawfordsville, Ind . 68 

Moore Street Day Nursery, Cambridge, Mass 80 

Morgan County Children's Home, Malta, Ohio 110 

Morgan Memorial Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Morgantown City Hospital, Morgantown, W. Va 216 

Morris County Children's Home, Parsippany, N. J 92 

Morrison Hospital, Whitefield, N. H 174 

Morrison's CoveHome for Aged and Infirm, Martinsburg, Pa. 256 

Morristown Memorial Hospital, Morristown, N. J 176 



Page. 

Morton Hospital, Taunton, Mass 162 

Morton Street Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Moses Taylor Hospital, Scranton, Pa 206 

Mothers' Aid Society Day Nurseries, New Haven-, Conn 60 

Mothers and Babies' Home, St. Louis, Mo 88 

Mothers' Jewels' Home, York, Nebr 88 

Mt. Carmel Children's Home, The, Mt. Carmel, Conn 60 

Mt. Carmel Hospital, Pittsburg, Kans 150 

Mt. Carmel Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 76 

Mt. Carmel Orphanage, Morrison, 111 68 

Mt. Hope Home, Boston, Mass 80 

Mt. Magdalen Reformatory of the Good Shepherd, Trov, 

N. Y: :. 284 

Mt. Pleasant Home, Boston, Mass 234 

Mt. Pleasant Home, Mt. Pleasant, S. C 120 

Mt. Rest Home, Knoxville, Tenn 260 

Mt. St. Joseph's Home for the Aged, Portland, Oreg 254 

Mt. St. Joseph's Industrial School for Boys, Millbury, Mass. 82 

Mt. St. Joseph's Infant Orphan Asvlum, San Francisco, Cal. 58 

Mt. St. Rose Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Mt. St. Vincent's Girls' Orphan Asylum, Hoi yoke. Mass 82 

Mt. Sinai Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

Mt. S'inai Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 1 94 

Mt. Sinai Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 218 

Mt. Sinai Hospital and DisiDensary, New York, N. Y 186 

Mt. Sinai Hospital Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Mt. Vernon Hospital, Mt. Vernon, N. Y 184 

Mt. Zion Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 130 

Mountainside Hospital, Montclair, N. J 176 

Muhlenberg Hospital, Plainfield, N. J 178 

Mullanphy Orphan Asylum, St. Louis, Mo 88 

Municipal Hospital, Erie, Pa 200 

Municipal Hospital, Johnstown, Pa 200 

Municipal Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Municipal Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Municipal Lodging House, New York, N. Y 282 

Municipal Lodging House, Washington, D. C 268 

Murrow Indian Orphan Asylum, Atoka, Ind. T 68 

Muskegon Humane Union Home, Muskegon, Mich 276 

Mystic Oral School for the Deaf, Mystic, Conn 296 

Nachusa Lutheran Orphanage, Nachusa, 111 68 

Nashua Protestant Home for Aged Women, Nashua, N. H . 242 

Nashua Protestant Orphanage, Nashua, N. H 90 

Nashville City Hospital, Nashville, Tenn 208 

Nason Hospital, Roaring Spring, Pa 206 

Nassau Hospital, Mineola, Long Island, N. Y 184 

Natchez Hospital, Natchez, Miss 168 

Nathan Littauer Hospital, Gloversville, N. Y. 182 

National Emergency Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

National Home forDisabled Volunteer Soldiers, Danville, 111 . 226 

National Home for Disabled VolunteerSoldiers,Dayton, Ohio. 252 

National Homefor Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Hampton, Va. 262 
National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Johnson 

City, Tenn 260 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Leaven- 
worth, Kans 230 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Marion, Ind. 228 
National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Milwaukee, 

Wis 264 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Santa Mon- 
ica, Cal 220 

National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, Togus, Me. 232 

National Homeopathic Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives, Denver, Colo. . 132 

National Junior Republic, Annapolis Junction, Md 76 

National Lutheran Home, Washington, D. C 224 

National Odd Fellows' Sanitarium, Gainesville, Fla ... 136 

National Orphan Home, Petersburg, Va 124 

National Orphans' Home, Tiflin, Ohio 112 

National Soldiers' Home, Quincy, Mass 236 

Nazarene Home for the Aged, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Nazareth Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Nazareth Trade School, Farmingdale, Long Island, N. Y. .. 96 

Nebraska Industrial Home, Milford, Nebr 278 

Nebraska Institute for the Blind, Nebraska City, Nebr 30O 

Nebraska Institute for the Deaf and Dumb, Omaha, Nebr. . .300 

Nebraska Masonic Home, Plattsmouth, Nebr 242 

Nebraska Methodist Hospital, Omaha, Nebr 174 

Nebraska Sanitarium, College View, Nebr 172 

Nebraska Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Grand Island, Nebr . 242 

Nettis Colored Orphans' Home, Orangehill, Fla 62 

New Amsterdam Eye and Ear Hospital, New York, N. Y. . 186 

New Bedford Day Nursery, New Bedford, Mass 82 



324 



INDEX. 



Page 

New Bedford Emergencv Hospital, New Bedford, Mass 160 

New Bedford Home for the Aged, New Bedford, Mass ..... 236 

New Bedford Orphans' Home, New Bedford, IMass 82 

New Bedford Port Society Home, New Bedford, Mass 276 

New Bedford Woman's Reform and Rehef Home, New Bed- 
ford, Mass 276 

New Braunfels City Hospital, New Braunfels, Tex 210 

New Brighton Day Nursery, New Brighton, Staten Island, 

N. Y ■ 98 

New Britain General Hospital, New Britain, Conn 134 

New Contagious Disease Hospital, Secaucus, N.J 178 

New England Baptist Hospital, Boston, Mass. 158 

New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

New England Home for Deaf-Mutes, Allston, Mass 298 

•New England Home for Little Wanderers, Boston, Mass... .. 80 
New England Hospital for Women and Children, Boston, 

Mass 158 

New England Industrial School for Deaf-Mutes, Beverly, 

Mass 298 

New England Kurn Hattin Home, Westminster, Vt 124 

New England Peabody Home for Crippled Children, Hyde 

Park, Mass , 82 

New England Rest Cottage, Providence, R. 1 290 

New England Sanitarium, Melrose, Mass 160 

New Hampshire Centennial Home for the Aged, Concord, 

N. H 242 

New Hampshire Memorial Hospital, Concord, N. H 174 

New Hampshire Odd Fellows' Home, Concord, N. H 242 

New Hampshire Orphans' Home, Franklin, N. H 88 

New Hampshire Soldiers' Home, Tilton, N. H 242 

New Haven County Temporary Home, New Haven, Conn . . 60 

New Haven Dispensary, New Haven, Conn 134 

New Haven Emergency Hospital, New Haven, Conn 134 

New Haven Hospital, The, New Haven, Conn 134 

New Haven Orphan Asylum, The, New Haven, Conn 60 

New Hope Hospital, Albion, Ind ., 146 

New Jersey Firemen's Home, Boonton, N. J 242 

New Jersey Home for Disabled Soldiers, Kearney, N. J 242 

New Jersey OrthopedicHospitalandDispensary,Orange,N. J. 176 

New Jersey School for the Deaf, Trenton, N. J 300 

New Jersey State Village for Epileptics, Skillman, N. J 244 

New London County Temporary Home, Norwich, Conn... 60 

New Orleans Convalescent Home, New Orleans, La 272 

New Orleans Female Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 76 

New Orleans Home for Incurables, New Orleans, La 232 

New Orphan Asylum for Colored Youth, Cincinnati, Ohio. 108 

New Rochelle Day Nursery, New Rochelle, N. Y 98 

New Rochelle Hospital, New Rochelle, N. Y 184 

New York Christian Home for Intemperate Men, Mt. Vernon, 

N. Y.... 282 

New York City Children's Hospitals and Schools, New York, 

N. Y 186 

New York Dispensary, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Eye and Ear Clinic, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Foundling Hospital, New York, N. Y 282 

New York Home for Convalescents, New York, N. Y 282 

New York Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Infant Asylum, New York, N. Y 284 

New York Infirmary for Women and Children, New York, 

N.Y 186 

New York Institution for the Blind, New York, N.Y 300 

New York Institution for the Improved Instruction of Deaf- 
Mutes, New York, N. Y 300 

New York Institution for the Instruction of the Deaf and 

Dumb, New York, N. Y 300 

New York Magdalen Benevolent Home, New York, N. Y . . 284 
New York Medical College and Hospital for Women, New 

York, N.Y 186 

New York Ophthalmic and Aural Institute, New York, N. Y . 186 

New York Ophthalmic Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Orthopedic Dispensary and Hospital, New York, 

N.Y 18(> 

New York Pasteur Institute, New York, N.Y 186 

New York Polyclinic Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Post-Graduate Medical School and Hospital, New 

York,N.Y 186 

New York Red Cross Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

New York Skin and Cancer Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

New York State Hospital for Crippled and Deformed Chil- 
dren, Tarrytown, N.Y 190 

New York State Hospital for Incipient Tuberculosis, Ray- 
brook, N. Y 188 



Page. 

New York State School for the Blind, Batavia, N. Y 300 

New York State Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Bath, N. Y"... 244 

New York State Woman's Relief Corps Home, Oxford, N. Y. 250 

Newark Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N. J 176 

Newark Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary, Newark, N. J.. 176 

Newark City Dispensary, Newark, N. J .'. 176 

Newark City Hospital, Newark, N. J 176 

Newark Emergency Hospital, Newark, N. J 176 

Newark Orphan Asylum, Newark, N. J 92 

Newark Rescue Home, Newark, N. J 280 

Newburg Day Nursery, Newburg, N. Y^ 102 

Newman Industrial Home and Mission, Jersey City, N. J . . 280 

Newport Hospital, Newport, R. I ." 206 

Newport News General Hospital, Newport News, Va 212 

News and Working Boys' Home, Los Angeles, Cal 56 

Newsboys and Bootblacks' Home, Chicago, 111 66 

Newsboys' Home, Louisville, Ky 74 

Newsboys' Lodging House, New York, N. Y 100 

Newton Center Day Nursery, Newton, Mass 82 

Newton Home for Aged People, Newton, Mass 236 

Newton Hospital, Newton, Mass 160 

Niagara Falls Memorial Hospital, Niagara Falls, N.Y 188 

Nichols Memorial Hospital, Battle Creek, Mich 162 

Nickerson Home for Children, Boston, Mass 80 

Night Refuge, Manchester, N. H . 278 

Noble Hospital, Westfield, Mass 162 

Norfolk City Dispensary, Norfolk, Va 212 

Norfolk County Emergency and General Hospital, Hyde 

Park, Mass 160 

Norfolk Protestant Hospital, Norfolk, Va 212 

North Adams Hospital, North Adams, Mass 160 

North Carolina Institution for the Education of the Deaf 

and Dumb, and the Blind, Raleigh, N. C 302 

North Carolina Medical College Dispensary, Charlotte, N. C. 192 
North Carolina School for the Deaf and Dumb, Morganton, 

N. C 302 

North Carolina Soldiers' Home, Raleigh, N. C 252 

North Dakota Children's Home, Fargo, N. Dak 106 

North Dakota Deaf and Dumb Asylum, Devils Lake, N. Dak. ' 302 

North End Day Nursery, Kansas City, Mo 86 

North End Dispensary, Providence, R. 1 206 

North Hudson Hospital, West Hoboken, N. J 178 

North Pennsylvania General Hospital and Sanitarium, Aus- 
tin, Pa 198 

North Side Children's Home and Day Nursery, Columbus, 

Ohio 108 

North Star Dispensary, Chicago, 111 142 

North Yakima Deaconess Hospital, North Yakima, Wash. . 214 

Northeastern Day Nursery, Baltimore, Md 78 

Northeastern Dispensary, Baltimore, JVId 156 

Northeastern Dispensary, New York, N. Y 186 

Northern Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Northern Day Nursery of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa... 116 

Northern Dispensarj^ New York, N. Y 186 

Northern Dispensary of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Northern Home for Friendless Children and Associated In- 
stitute for Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans, Philadelphia, Pa. 116 

Northern Michigan General Hospital, Laurium, Mich 184 

Northern New York Institution for Deaf-Mutes, Malone, 

N. Y 300 

Northern Pacific Hospital, Brainerd, Minn 166 

Northern Pacific Railway Hospital, Missoula, Mont 172 

Northwestern Dispensary, New Y^ork, N. Y 186 

Northwestern District Medical Agency, Baltimore, Md 156 

Northwestern Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn 166 

Northwestern Hospital, Princeton, Minn 168 

North wood Deaconess Hospital, North wood, N. Dak 192 

Norwalk Hospital, Norwalk, Conn 134 

Norway Home for Aged Women, Norway, Me 232 

Norwegian Lutheran Children's Home, Chicago, 111 1 66 

Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess Home and Hospital, Brook- 
lyn, N. Y 180 

Norwegian Lutheran Deaconess Home and Hospital, Chi- 
cago, 111 ■ 142 

Norwegian Lutheran Old People's Home, Stoughton, Wis.. 264 

Norwegian Lutheran Tabitha Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Norwegian Old People's Home, Chicago, 111 226 

Notre Dame Hospital, Manchester, N. H 174 

Notre Dame Hospital and Orphanage, Manchester, N. H . . . 242 

Notre Dame School for the Deaf, Cincinnati, Ohio 302 

Noyes Memorial Home, Peekskill, N. Y 284 

Nursery and Child's Hospital, Castleton Corners, Lons Is- 
land,' N. Y :.... 96 



INDEX. 



325 



Page. 

Nursery and Child's Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

Nursery and Child's Hospital of Baltimore City, Baltimore, 

Md 78 

Nyack Hospital, Nyack, N. Y 188 

Obion County Pesthouse, Union City, Tenn 208 

Octave Gold Mining Company Hospital, Octave, Ariz 128 

Odd Fellows' Home, Ben Avon, Pa 254 

Odd Fellows' Home, Checotah, Ind. T 228 

Odd Fellows' Home, Green Bay, Wis 264 

Odd Fellows' Home, Greensburg, Ind 228 

Odd Fellows' Home, Liberty, Mo 240 

Odd Fellows' Home, Lockport, N. Y - . 248 

Odd Fellows' Home, Mattoon, 111 226 

Odd Fellows' Home, Meadville, Pa 114 

Odd Fellows' Home, Portland, Oreg 254 

Odd Fellows' Home, Thermalito, Cal 222 

Odd Fellows' Home, Trenton, N. J 244 

Odd Fellows' Home, Wallawalla, Wash 264 

Odd Fellows' Home of Connecticut, Groton, Conn 222 

Odd Fellows' Home of Massachusetts, Worcester, Mass .... 238 

Odd Fellows' Home of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Odd Fellows' Home of Virginia, Lynchburg, Ya 124 

Odd Fellows' Orphan Home, Goldsboro, N. C 106 

Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home, Gilroy, Cal 56 

Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home of Central Pennsylvania, Sun- 
bury, Pa 118 

Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home of Illinois, Lincoln, 111 66 

Odd Fellows' Widows and Orphans' Home, Corsicana, Tex. 260 

Odd Fellows' Widows and Orphans' Home, Lexington, Ky. 230 

Oella Free Dispensary, Oella, Md 156 

O' Fallon Dispensary, St. Louis, Mo i 170 

Ogdensburg City Hospital, Ogdensburg, N. Y 188 

Ogdensburg Home and Orphanage, Ogdensburg, N. Y 248 

Ohio Home for Aged and Infirm Deaf, Westerville, Ohio. . . 302 

Ohio Hospital for Epileptics, Gallipolis, Ohio 196 

Ohio Hospital for Women and Children, Cincinnati, Ohio.. 194 
Ohio Institution for the Education of Deaf and Dumb, Colum- 
bus, Ohio 302 

Ohio Masonic Home, Springfield, Ohio 254 

Ohio Maternity Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Ohio Medical tlniversitv Free Dispensary, Columbus, Ohio. 196 

Ohio Odd Fellows' Home, Springfield, Ohio 254 

Ohio Pythian Home, Springfield, Ohio 110 

Ohio Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Sandusky, Ohio 254 

Ohio Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans' Home, Xenia, Ohio... 112 

Ohio State School for the Blind, Columbus, Ohio 302 

Oil City Hospital and Training School for Nurses, Oil City, Pa. 200 

Oklahoma Baptist Ori^hans' Home, Oklahoma City, Okla . . 112 

Oklahoma Orphanage, Oklahoma Citv, Okla 112 

Oklahoma Rescue Home, Guthrie, Okla 286 

Old Adams Street Day Nursery, Toledo, Ohio 112 

Old Folks and OrjDhan Children's Home, Mexico, Ind 228 

Old Folks and Orphans' Home, Hutchinson, Kans 230 

Old Folks and Orphans' Home, Kansas City, Mo 240 

Old Folks' Home, Hampton, Va 262 

Old Folks' Home, Monroe, Mich 238 

Old Folks' Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Old Folks' Home, Timberville, Va 262 

Old Folks' Home and Industrial School, Blackshear, Ga. . . 224 

Old Folks' Home and Orphan Asylum, Covington, Ky 230 

Old Folks' Home of Alexandria, Alexandria, Va 262 

Old Ladies' Home, Bath, Me 232 

Old Ladies' Home, Beverly, Mass 234 

Old Ladies' Home, Chelsea, Mass 234 

Old Ladies' Home, Denver, Colo 222 

Old Ladies' Home, Elyria, Ohio 252 

Old Ladies' Home, Haverhill, Mass 236 

Old Ladies' Home, Lowell, Mass 236 

Old Ladies' Home, Mohawk, N. Y 248 

Old Ladies' Home, Muscatine, Iowa 230 

Old Ladies' Home, New Albany, Ind 228 

Old Ladies' Home, Newburyport, Mass 236 

Old Ladies' Home, Oshkosh, Wis 264 

Old Ladies' Home, Paterson, N. J 244 

Old Ladies' Home, Poughkeepsie, N. Y 250 

Old Ladies' Home, Rutland, Vt 262 

Old Ladies' Home, Tampa, Fla 224 

Old Ladies' Home, Taunton, Mass 238 

Old Ladies' Home, Toledo, Ohio 254 

Old Ladies' Home of Bergen County, Hackensack, N. J 242 

Old Ladies' Home of Madison County, Oneida, N. Y 250 

Old Ladies' Home of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa 258 



Page. 

Old Man's Home, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Old Masons' Home of Kentucky, Shelby ville, Ky 230 

Old People and Orphans' Home, Mt. Morris, 111 ." 226 

Old People's Charitable Home, South Haven, Mich 238 

Old People's Home, Avilla, Ind 228 

Old People's Home, Braintree, Mass 234 

Old People's Home, Chicago, 111 226 

Old People's Home, Hartford, Conn 222 

Old People's Home, Jacksonville, 111 226 

Old People's Home, Lynchburg, Va 262 

Old People's Home, Mechanicsburg, Pa 256 

Old People's Home, Omaha, Nebr 242 

Old People's Home, Quincy, 111 226 

Old People's Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Old People's Home, San Francisco, Cal 220 

Old People's Rest Home, Woodstock, 111 228 

Old Town Hospital, Old Town, Me 154 

Old Woman's Home, Nashville, Tenn 260 

Old Women's Home, Alexandria, Va 262 

Clean General Hospital, Clean, N. Y 188 

O'Leary Home, Louisville, Ky 230 

Omaha Emergency Hospital, Omaha, Nebr 174 

Oneida Public Hospital, Oneida, N. Y 188 

Onondaga County Orphan Asylum, Syracuse, N. Y... 104 

Ontario Orphan Asylum, Canandaigua, N. Y : 96 

Open Door, The, Des Moines, Iowa 270 

Open Hearth, The, Hartford, Conn 266 

Ophelia Polk Moore Memorial Home, Helena, Ark 220 

Ophthalmic Hospital and Dispensary, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Orange County Home for Aged Women, Middletown, N. Y. 248 

Orange Home, Hatboro, Pa 254 

O'Rear Smallpox Hospital, Chattanooga, Tenn 208 

Oregon Institute for the Blmd, Salem, Oreg 302 

Oregon School for Deaf-Mutes, Salem, Oreg 302 

Oriental Home, San Francisco, Cal , 266 

Orphan Asylum Society in the City of New York, New- 
York, N.Y 100 

Orphan Asylum Society of the City of Brooklvn, Brooklyn, 

NY 94 

Orphan Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 94 

Orphan Home, The, East Orange, N. J 90 

Orphan House, Brooklyn, N. Y. 96 

Orphan House and Episcopal Free School Society of All 

Saints Church, Frederick, Md 78 

Orphan House of the Holy Saviour, Cooperstown, N. Y 96 

Orphan Society of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa . 116 

Orphanage of Our Lady of Mercy, Worcester, Mass 82 

Orphanage of the Good Shepherd, Louisville, Ky 74 

Orphanage of the Holy Child, Springfield, 111 68 

Orphans' and Industrial Home, Jacksonville, Fla 62 

Orphans' Home, Belleview, Fla 62 

Orphans' Home, Concord, N. H 88 

Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo 88 

Orphans' Home, Vasa, Minn 86 

Orphans' Home and Asylum, New York, N. Y. 100 

Orphans' Home and Day Nursery, Salt Lake City, Utah 124 

Orphans' Home and Orphans' Farm School, Zelienople, Pa. 120 

Orj^hans' Home of Baltimore, Baltimore, Md 78 

Orphans' Home of the North Georgia Conference, Decatur, 

Ga - 64 

Orthodox Jewish Home for the Aged, Chicago, 111 226 

Ossining Hospital, Ossining, N. Y 188 

Oswego Hospital, Oswego, N. Y 188 

Oswego Orphan Asylum, Oswego, N. Y 102 

Ottilie Orphan Asylum, Brooklyn, N. Y 96 

Ottumwa Hospital, Ottumwa, Iowa 150 

Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Hot Springs, S. Dak 208 

Our Lady's Home, San Fi-ancisco, Cal 220 

Our Saviour's Hospital, Jacksonville, 111 144 

Owatonna .City Hospital, watonna, Minn 168 

Owensboro City Hospital, Owensboro, Ky 152 

Oxford County Emergency Hospital, Rumkird Falls, Me... 154 

Oxford Orphan Asylum, Oxford, N. C 106 

Ozanam Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 280 

Pacific Dispensary of the Children's Hospital, San Fran- 
cisco, Cal 130 

Pacific Hebrew Orphan Asylum, San Francisco, Cal 58 

Pacific Homeopathic Polyclinic, San Francisco, Cal 132 

Pacific Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

Paducah City Hospital, Paducah, Ky 152 

Painesville Hospital, Painesville, Ohio 196 

Pajaro Valley Orphan Asylum, Watsonville, Cal 58 



326 



INDEX. 



Page. 

Palmer Memorial Hospital, Janesville, Wis 216 

Palmer Orphanage, Columbus, Miss 86 

Park Emergency Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

Parker Memorial Hospital, Columbia, Mo __ 168 

Parker's Helping Hand Home for Aged Men and Convales- 
cents, Boston, Mass 274 

Parkland (City ) Hospital, Dallas, Tex 210 

Parkland Lutheran Children's Home, Parkland, Wash 126 

Parks Hospital, Glens Falls, N. Y 182 

Pasadena Children's Training Society, Pasadena, Cal 56 

Pasadena Hospital, Pasadena, Cal 130 

Passaic Day Nursery, Passaic, N.J 92 

. Passaic General Hospital, Passaic, N. J 176 

Home and Orphan Asylum, Passaic, N.J : 92 

ivant Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

i-ant Memorial Home for Epileptics, Rochester, Pa . . . 2.58 

Passavant Memorial Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Passavant Memorial Hospital, Jacksonville, 111 144 

Paterson Eye and Ear Infirmary, Patersou, N.J 176 

Paterson General Hospital, Paterson, N.J 1 78 

Paterson Isolation Hospital, Paterson, N.J 178 

Paterson Orphan Asylum, Paterson, N.J 92 

Paterson Rescue Mission, Paterson, N. J 280 

Patten Home, Portland, Oreg 254 

Pattie A. Clay Infirmary, Richmond, Kv 152 

Paul Clark Home, Butte, Mont " 242 

Pawtucket Day Nursery, Pawtucket, R. I 120 

Pawtucket Dispensary," Pawtucket, R. 1 206 

Pawtucket General and Emergency Hospital, Pawtucket, 

R.I 206 

Peabody Home for Aged and Indigent Women, New York, 

NY - 248 

Peekskill Hospital, Peekskill, N. Y 188 

Pelham Hall Shelter, Pelham Manor, N. Y 284 

Peniel Home of Peace, San Francisco, Cal 266 

Peniel Rescue Home, Sacramento, Cal 266 

Peninsula General Hospital, Salisbury, Md 156 

Penn and Aragon Hospital, Norway, Mich 164 

Pennsylvania Asylum for Indigent Widows and Single Wo- 
men, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Pennsylvania Epileptic Hospital and Colony Farm, Oak- 
bourne, Pa 256 

Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Pennsylvania Industrial Home for Blind Women, Philadel- 
phia, Pa 302 

Pennsylvania Institution for Deaf and Dumb, Philadelphia, 

Pa 302 

Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind, 

Philadelphia, Pa 302 

Pennsylvania Memorial Home, Brook ville. Pa 254 

Pennsylvania Oral School for the Deaf, Scranton, Pa 302 

Pennsylvania Retreat for Blind Mutes and Aged and Infirm 

Blind Persons, Philadelphia, Pa 302 

Pennsylvania Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Erie, Pa 254 

Pennsylvania Soldiers' Orphan Industrial School, Scotland, 

Pa 118 

Pentecost Band Faith Orphanage, Indianapolis, Ind 70 

People's Place Dispensary, San Francisco, Cal 132 

People's Rescue Mission, Rochester, N. Y 284 

Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School for the Blind, 

Boston, Mass 298 

Perry County Children's Home, New Lexington, Ohio 110 

Perth Amboy City Hospital, Perth Amboy, N.J 178 

Philadelphia Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Philadelphia Ear, Ej^e, Nose, and Throat Institute, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 202 

Philadelphia German Protestant Home for the Aged, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 258 

Philadelphia Home for Incurables, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Philadelphia Home for Infants, Philadelphia, Pa. 116 

Philadelphia Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Philadelphia Lying-in Charity Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa.. 202 
Philadelphia Orthopedic Hospital and Infirmary for Nervous 

Diseases, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Philadelphia Polyclinic and College for Graduates in Medi- 
cine, Philadelphia, Pa _-.. 202 

Philadelphia Quarterly Meetings' Boarding Home, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 258 

Philadelphia Rescue Home, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Phineas Stowe Seamen's Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Phoenix Hospital, Maywood, 111 144 

Phoenix Mine Dispensary, Phoenix, Mich 164 

Phoenixville Hospital, Phoenixville, Pa 204 

Phyllis Wheatley Home, Detroit, Mich 238 



Page. 

Physio-Medical College Free Dispensary, Indianapolis, Ind. 146 

Pickaway County Children's Home, Cireleville, Ohio 108 

Pickford Sanitarium, Southern Pines, N. C 192 

Pierce County Hospital, Tacoma, Wash 214 

Pike County Children's Home, Waverly, Ohio 112 

Pima Indian School Hospital, Sacaton, Ariz 128 

Pittman Hospital, Tarboro, N. C 192 

Pittsburg and Allegheny Home for the Friendless, Alle- 
gheny, Pa 112 

Pittsburg City Hospital, Pittsburg, Kans 150 

Pittsburg Free Dispensary, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Pittsburg Hospital for Children, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Pittsburg Newsboys' Home, Pittsburg, Pa 118 

Pittsfleld General and Emergency Hospital, Pittsfield, Mass. 160 

Pittston Hospital, Pittston, Pa 204 

Poor Saints' Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Port Angeles General Hospital, Port Angeles, Wash 214 

Port Richmond Day Nursery, Port Richmond, N. Y 102 

Portsmouth Cottage Hospital, Portsmouth, N. H 174 

Portsmouth Orphan Asylum, Portsmouth, Va 124 

Post Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah 212 

Post-Graduate Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 218 

Potrero Emergency Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

Pottstown Hospital, Pottstown, Pa 204 

Pottsville Hospital and Dispensary, Pottsville, Pa 204 

Poughkeepsie Orphan House and Home for the Friendless, 

Poughkeepsie, N. Y.. 102 

. Poydras Asylum, New Orleans, La 76 

Preble County Children's Home, Eaton, Ohio 108 

Presbyterian Eye, Ear, and Throat Charity Hospital, Balti- 
more, Md 156 

Presbyterian Home, Troy, N. Y 250 

Presbyterian Home for Aged Couples and Aged Men, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 258 

Presbyterian Home for Aged Women, New York, N. Y 248 

Presbyterian Home for Orphan Children, Dallas, Tex 122 

Presbyterian Home for Widows and Single Women, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 258 

Presbyterian Home Hospital, Memphis, Tenn 208 

Presbyterian Hospital, Atlanta, Ga 138 

Presbyterian Hospital, Charlotte, N. C 192 

Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Presbyterian Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Presbyterian Hospital, Omaha, Nebr 174 

Presbyterian Hospital in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa ... 202 
Presbyterian Hospital in the City of New York, New York, 

N. Y 186 

Presbyterian Hospital of Pittsburg and Allegheny, Alle- 
gheny, Pa „ 198 

Presbyterian Orphanage, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Presbyterian Orphans' Home, Barium Springs, N. C 104 

Presbyterian Orphans' Home, Lynchburg, Va 124 

Presbyterian Orphans' Home, Talladega, Ala 56 

Presentation Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Preston Retreat, Philadelphia, Pa 202 

Prince Hall Masonic Home, Rock Island, 111 228 

Prince of Peace Hospital (maternity), Philadelphia, Pa 204 

Pringle Memorial Home, Poughkeepsie, N. Y 250 

Proctor Hospital, Proctor, Vt 212 

Prospect Heights Hospital and Brooklyn Maternity, Brook- 
lyn, N-. Y 180 

Protectory for Boys, Cincinnati, Ohio 108 

Protectory of Mary Immaculate, Lawrence, Mass 82 

Protestant Deaconess Hospital, Evansville, Ind 146 

Protestant Deaconess Hospital, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

Protestant Door of Hope, Kansas City, Mo 278 

Protestant Episcopal Church Home, "Richmond, Va 262 

Protestant Episcopal Church Home, Rochester, N. Y 250 

Protestant Episcopal Old Ladies' Home, San Francisco, Cal. 220 

Protestant Episcopal Orphan Asylum, Louisville, Ky 74 

Protestant Foster Home, Newark, N. J 92 

Protestant Half Orphan Asylum, New York, N. Y 100 

Protestant Home for Boys, Allegheny, Pa 112 

Protestant Home for Destitute Children, San Antonio, Tex. 122 

Protestant Home for Incurables, Pittsburg, Pa 258 

Protestant HomeforRespectable Aged Women, Newark, N. J. 244 

Protestant Home for the Friendless, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

Protestant Home for Working Boys, Cincinnati, Ohio 108 

Protestant Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

Protestant Orphan A sylum, Detroit, Mich 84 

Protestant Orphan Asylum, Mobile, Ala 56 

Protestant Orphan Asylum, Nashville, Tenn 122 

Protestant Orphan Asylum, Natchez, Miss 86 

Protestant Orphan Asylum, St. Paul, Minn 86 



INDEX. 



327 



Page. 
Protestant Orphan Asylum of Pittsburg and Allegheny, Al- 
legheny, Pa ' 112 

Protestant Orphans' Home, New Orleans, La 76 

Providence Children's Friend Society, Providence, R. I 120 

Providence Hospital, El Paso, Tex /. 210 

Providence Hospital, Oakland, Cal 130 

Providence Hospital, Sandusky, Ohio 196 

Providence Hospital, Seattle, Wash. 214 

Providence Hospital, Wallace, Idaho 138 

Providence Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Providence In^rmary, Mobile, Ala 128 

Providence Lying-in Hospital, Providence, E. I 206 

Providence Rescue Home, Providence, R. I 290 

Providence Shelter for Colored Children, Providence, R. I. . 120 

Provident Llospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Provident Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Provident Hospital and Free Dispensary, Baltimore, Md . . . 156 

Provincial Convent of the Good Shepherd, Carthage, Ohio . 106 

Provo General Hospital, Provo City, Utah 210 

Pueblo Children's Home, Pueblo, Colo 60 

Pueblo Hospital, Pueblo, Colo 134 

Pulte Homeopathic Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Putnam County Orphans' Home, Greencastle, Ind 68 

Quai-antine and Smallpox Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

Quarantine Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y ._ 182 

Quarantine Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn 166 

Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, Amity ville, N. Y 94 

Quincy Dispensary, Hancock, Mich 164 

Quincy United Brethren Orphanage and Home, Quincy, Pa. 118 

Rachel L. Allen Home, Boston, Mass 234 

Railroad Y. M. C. A. Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Rantoul Children's Home, Rantoul, 111 68 

Reading Home for A ged Women, Reading, Mass 236 

Reading Hospital, Reading, Pa 206 

Rebecca Poraroy Newton Home for Orphan Girls, Newton, 

Mass •- 82 

Rebekah Home, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Receiving Home, The, Berkeley, Cal 56 

Receiving Home, St. Joseph, Mich 84 

Receiving Home, St. Louis, Mo 88 

Receiving Home, Trenton, N. J 92 

Receiving Hospital, Eureka, Cal : 130 

Reception Hospital, New Y^ork, N. Y 186 

Red Cross Hospital, The, Salida, Colo 134 

Red Cross Hospital, Superior, Wis . . : 218 

Red Cross Sanitarium, Louisville, Ky 152 

Reed Home and School, Covington, Ga 64 

Refuge, The, Binghamton, N. Y 280 

Refuge Home, Memphis, Tenn 290 

Refuge in the City of Boston, Boston, Mass 274 

Reineman Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Republic Hospital, Republic, Mich 164 

Rescue Home, Buffalo, N. Y 282 

Rescue Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

Rescue Home for Girls, Columbus, Ohio 286 

Rest Cottage, Chicago, 111 270 

Rest Cottage'No. 3, Greensboro, N. C 284 

Rest Cottage No. 7, Kansas City, Mo 278 

Retreat, The, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

Retreat for the Sick, Richmond, Va 212 

Rex Hospital, Raleigh, N. C 192 

Reynolds Memorial Hospital, Glendale, W. Va 216 

Rhode Island Catholic Orphan Asylum, Providence, R. I.. 120 

Rhode Island Home for Working Boys, Providence, R. I . . 120 

Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, JR. 1 206 

Rhode Island Institute for the Deaf, Providence, R. 1 302 

Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil- 
dren, Providence, R. 1 120 

Rhode Island Soldiers' Home, Bristol, R. I 260 

Richland County Children's Home, Mansfield, Ohio 110 

Richmond Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Dispensary and In- 
firmary, Richmond, Va 2] 2 

Richmond Home for Ladies, Richmond, Va 262 

Richmond Male Orphan Asylum, Richmond, Va 124 

Ridgely Home for Orphans of Odd Fellows, Kearney, N. J. '90 

Riverside Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

Riverside Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

Riverside Hospital, New York, N. Y 186 

Riverside Hospital, Wausau, Wis 218 

Roadside Settlement Day Nursery, Des Moines, Iowa , 72 

Robert Garrett Hospital for Children, Baltimore, Md 156 

Robert N. Strong Home, Knox ville, Tenn 290 

Robert Packer Hospital, Sayre, Pa 206 



Page. 

Rochester City Hospital, Rochester, N. Y 190 

Rochester Home for the Friendless, Rochester, N. Y 250 

Rochester Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary, Roches- 
ter, N. Y 190 

Rochester Municipal Hospital, Rochester, N. Y 190 

Rochester Orphan Asylum, Rochester, N. Y 102 

Rock Hill Private Hospital, Rock Hill, S. C 208 

Rock Nook Children's Home, Norwich, Conn 60 

Rockford Hospital, Rockford, 111 144 

Rocky Beach Orphanage, Lansing, Mich 84 

Rodman Street Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 116 

Rogers Orphans' Home, Lagrange, Ind 70 

Rolfe and Rumford Asylum, Concord, N. H 88 

Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, New York, N. Y 100 

Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, San Francisco, Cal 58 

Rome Hospital, Rome, N. Y 190 

Roosevelt Hospital, New York, N. Y^ -. 188 

Rosary Hill Home, Hawthorne, N. Y 246 

Rose Orphan Home, Terre Haute, Ind : 70 

Roselia Foundling Asylum and Maternity Hospital, Pitts- 
burg, Pa 290 

Rosine Association of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Ross County Children's Home, Chillicothe, Ohio 106 

Roxborough Home for Women, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Roxbury Home for Children and Aged Women, Boston, 

Mass 234 

Roxbury Homeopathic Dispensary, Boston, Mass 158 

Rufus S. Frost General Hospital, Chelsea, Mass 158 

Ruggles Street Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Rush Hospital for Consumption and Allied Diseases, Phila- 
delphia, Pa 204 

Ruth C. Sabin Home, Laporte, Ind 228 

Rutland Hospital, Rutland, Vt 212 

Ryder Home for Old People, Plymouth, Mass 236 

Sacramento Foundling Home, Sacramento, Cal 58 

Sacramento Protestant Orphan Asylum, Sacramento, Cal..,. 58 

Sacred Heart Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 286 

Sacred Heart Hospital, Aviston, 111 138 

Sacred Heart Hospital, Eau Claire, Wis 216 

Sacred Heart Hospital, Garrett, Ind .• ... 146 

Sacred Heart Hospital, Manchester, N. H 174 

Sacred Heart Hospital, Tomahawk, Wis 218 

Sacred Heart Hospital, Y^ankton, S. Dak 208 

Sacred Heart of Mary Asylum, Doyle, N. Y 246 

Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 76 

Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum, New York, N. Y^ 100 

Sacred Heart Orphanage, Belmont, N. C 106 

Sacred Heart Orphanage, Pueblo, Colo 60 

Saginaw General Hospital, Saginaw, Mich , 166 

Sailors' Snug Harbor, New Brighton, N. Y 248 

Sailors' Snug Harbor of Boston, Quincy, Mass 236 

St. jEmilianus Orphan Asylum, St. Francis, Wis 126 

St. Agatha Home for Children, Nanuet, N. Y 98 

St. Agnes Babv Home, Parkplace, Oreg 112 

St. Agnes Convent, Sparkill, N. Y 104 

St. Agnes Day Nursery, New York, N. Y ] 00 

St. Agnes Hospital, Fond du Lac, W^is 216 

St. Agnes Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

St. Agnes Hospital, Raleigh, N. C 192 

St. Agnes Industrial Home, Washington, D. C 62 

St. Agnes South Brooklyn Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y... 96 

St. Albans Hospital, St. Albans, Vt. . ." .- 212 

St. Alexander Home, New Ulm, Minn 240 

St. Alexander Hospital, New Ulm, Minn. 168 

St. Alexis Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

St. Alexius Hospital, Bismarck, N. Dak 1 92 

St. Aloysius Orphan Asylum, Cincinnati, Ohio 108 

St. Aloysius Orphans' Home, Quincy, 111 68 

St. Alphonsus Hospital, Boise, Idaho 138 

St. Alphonsus Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 76 

St. Alphonsus Orphan Asylum, Wheeling, W. Va 126 

St. Andrew's Convalescent Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Andrew's Hospital, Murphysboro, 111 144 

St. Andrew's Industrial School, Barrington, R. I 120 

St. Anna's Asylum, New Orleans, La 232 

St. Anne's French-Canadian Orphanage, Worcester, Mass.. 82 

St. Ann's Charitable Institution, Bristow, Va 124 

St. Ann's Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

St. Ann's Foundhng Asylum, St. Louis, Mo 88 

St. Ann's Home, Peekskill, N. Y 102 

St. Ann's Home for Aged Women, Baltimore, Md 234 

St. Ann's Home for Destitute Children, New York, N. Y .. 100 

St. Ann's Home for the Aged, Rochester, N. Y 250 

St. Ann's Home for the Aged, Shermerville, 111 228 



328 



INDEX. 



Page. 

St. Ann's Hospital, Anaconda, Mont 172 

St. Ann's Infant Asylum, Cleveland, Ohio 108 

St. Ann's Infant Asyluin_, Washington, D. C 62 

St. Ann' s Lying-in H ospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

St. Ann's Maternity Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

St. Ann's Orphan Asylum for Girls, La Crosse, Wis 126 

St. Ann's Providence Orphan Asylum, Terre Haute, Ind... 70 

St. Ann's Sanitarium, Chicago, 111 142 

St. Ann's Widows' Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

St. Ann's Widows' Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

St. Anthony's German Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md . 78 

St. Anthony's Home, Chicago, 111 226 

St. Anthony's Home, Danville, 111 66 

St. Anthony's Home, Kansas City, Mo 86 

St. Anthony's Home, Lafayette, Ind 228 

. St. Anthony's Home for the Aged, Dubuque, Iowa 230 

St. Anthony's Home for the Aged, Iowa City, Iowa 230 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Bemidji, Minn 166 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Denver, Colo 134 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Effingham, 111 142 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Michigan City, Ind 146 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Oklahoma City, Okla 198 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Pendleton, Oreg 198 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Pensacola, Fla 138 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Rock Island, 111 144 

St. Anthony's Hospital, Rockford, 111 144 

St. Anthony's Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 170 

St. Anthony's Orphan Asylum, Kearney, N. J 90 

St. Anthony's Sanitarium, Amarillo, Tex 210 

St. Augustine Emergency Hospital, New Augustine, Fla 136 

St. Augustine's Children's Farm and Convalescent Home, 

Foxboro, Mass , 80 

St. Augustine's Hospital, Minocqua, Wis 218 

St. Barnabas Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn 166 

St. Barnabas House, New York, N. Y 284 

St. Bartholomew's Clinic, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Benedict's Home, Rye, N. Y 102 

St. Benedict's Hospital, Grand Rapids, Minn 166 

St. Bernard's Farm School, Gladstone, N. J 90 

St. Bernard's Hospital, Jonesboro, Ark 128 

St. Catharine' s Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 1 80 

St. Catharine's Infirmary, Amityville, Long Island, N. Y. . . 244 

St. Catherine's Asylum, Reading, Pa 118 

St.. Catherine's Orphan Asylum, Anaheim, Cal 56 

St. Catherine's Orphan Asyluni, San Bernardino, Cal 58 

St. Charles Hospital, Aurora, 111 '.. 138 

St. Christina's Industrial School, Saratoga Springs, N. Y 102 

St. Christopher's Home for Children, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. . . 96 

St. Christopher's Hospital for Babies, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pa... 204 

St. Chrysostom's Chapel Dispensary, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Clair's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 194 

St. Clara's Hospital, Lincoln, 111 144 

St. Clara's Orphanage, Denver, Colo 60 

St. Clara's Orphanage, Polonia, Wis 126 

St. Clare's Hospital, Fort Benton, Mont 172 

St. Clement's Hospital, Redbud, 111 144 

St. Colman's Orphan Asylum, Albany, N. Y 94 

St. Dominic's Home, New Hyde Park, N. Y 98 

St. Dominic's Home, Paterson, N. J 244 

St. Edward's Hospital, New Albany, Ind 146 

St. Eleanora's Home for Convalescents, Tuckahoe, N. Y ... 284 

St. Elizabeth's Home, Providence, R. 1 260 

St. Elizabeth's Home, Utica, N. Y 250 

St. Elizabeth's Home for Colored Children, Baltimore, Md. 78 

St.' Elizabeth's Hospital, Appleton, Wis 216 

St. EHzabeth's Hospital, Baker City, Oreg 198 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Belleville, 111 138 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Covington, Ky 150 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Danville, 111 142 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Dayton, Ohio 196 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Fort Madison, Iowa 148 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Lafayette, Ind '.... 146 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Lincoln, Nebr 174 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, North Yakima, Wash 214 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Sedro Woolley, Wash 214 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Utica, N. Y 190 

St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Wabasha, Minn 168 



Page. 

St. Elizabeth's Industrial School, New Orleans, La 76 

St. Ehzabeth's Industrial School, New York, N. Y 100 

St. Ehzabeth's Orphan Asylum, Portland, Me 76 

St. Ehzabeth's Orphanage," Wabasha, Minn 86 

St. Faith's House, Tarrytown, N. Y 284 

St. Frances Orphan Asylum, Normandy, Mo 86 

St. Francis Asylum, Buffalo, N. Y 246 

St. Francis de Sales Asylum, Albany, N. Y 94 

St. Francis Home, Gardenville, N. Y 246 

St. Francis Home, Oswego, N. Y 102 

St. Francis Home, Tiffin, Ohio 254 

St. Francis Home and Orphanage, Boston, Mass 234 

St. Francis Home for the Aged, San Antonio, Tex 262 

St. Francis Home for the Aged, Williamsville, N. Y 250 

St. Francis Home for the Aged, Worcester, Mass 238 

St. Francis Hospital, Breckenridge, Minn 166 

St. Francis Hospital, Burlington, Iowa. 148 

St. Francis Hospital, Cape Girardeau, Mo 168 

St. Francis Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

St. Francis Hospital, Colorado Springs, Colo 132 

St. Francis Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 196 

St. Francis Hospital, Evanston, 111 144 

St. Francis Hospital, Freeport, 111 144 

St. Francis Hospital, Grand Island, Nebr 174 

St. Francis Hospital, Hartford, Conn 134 

St. Francis Hospital, Jersey City, N. J 176 

St. Francis Hospital, Kewanee, 111 144 

St. Francis Hospital, La Crosse, Wis 216 

St. Francis Hospital, Litchfield, 111 ., 144 

St. Francis Hospital, Macomb, 111 144 

St. Francis Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Francis Hospital, Peoria, 111 144 

St. Francis Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa : 204 

St. Francis Hospital, Superior, Wis 218 

St. Francis Hospital, Trenton, N. J 178 

St. Francis Hospital, Wichita, Kans 150 

St. Francis Industrial School, Eddington, Pa 114 

St. Francis Orphan Asylum, Jersey City, N. J 90 

St. Francis Orphan Asylum, The, New Haven, Conn 60 

St. Francis Orphans' Home, Monroe, Mich 84 

St. Francis Xavier's Infirmary, Charleston, S. C 208 

St. Francis Xavier's School for the Deaf, Baltimore, Md ... 298 

St. Gabriel's Hospital, Little Falls, Minn 166 

St. George's Hospital, Iron Mountain, Mich 164 

St. George's Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 170 

St. Helena Sanitarium, St. Helena, Cal 130 

St. Ignatius Hospital, Colfax, Wash 214 

St. James Dav Nursery, Trenton, N. J 92 

St. James Home, New York, N. Y 100 

St. James Hospital, Butte, Mont 172 

St. .James 'Hospital, Newark, N. J 176 

St. James H ospital, Perham, Minn 168 

St. James Mercy Hospital, Hornellsville, N. Y 182 

St. James Old Folks' Home, Louisville, Ky 230 

St. James Orphan Asylum, Hartford, Conn 60 

St. James Orphan Home, Duluth, Minn. 84 

St. James Orphanage, Benson, Nebr 88 

St. James Protectory, Delaware City, Del 62 

St. Joachim's Hospital, Watertown, N. Y 190 

St. Johnland, Kings Park, N. Y 246 

St. John's CathoHc Orphanage, Belleville, 111 64 

St. John's Church House, Stamford, Conn 222 

St. John's Creche, Orange, N. J 92 

St. John's Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

St. John's Eruptive Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

St. John's Evangelical Deaconess Hospital, Lincoln,' 111 144 

St. John's Female Orphan Asylum, Utica, N. Y 104 

St. John's Free Dispensary, Waterbury, Conn 136 

St. John's General Hospital, Allegheny, Pa 198 

St. John's German Orphan Asylum, Covington, Kv 74 

St. John's Home, Brooklyn, N. Y ." 96 

St. John's Home for Aged Women, Milwaukee, Wis 264 

St. John's Home for Aged Women, Yonkers, N. Y 250 

St. John's Home for Boys, Elm Grove, W. Va 126 

St. John's Hospital, Anderson, Ind 146 

St. John's Hospital, Brooklyn, JST. Y , 180 

St. John's Hospital, Cheyenne, Wyo 218 

St. John's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 196 

St. John's Hospital, Fargo, N. Dak 192 

St. John's Hospital, Helena, Mont 172 

St. John's Hospital, Joplin, Mo 168 

St. John's Hospital, Leavenworth, Kans 150 

St. John's Hospital, Lowell, Mass 160 

St. John's Hospital, Port Townsend, Wash 214 



INDEX. 



329 



Asylum, Ferdinand, Ind. 

s Asylum, New York, N. Y 

s Bohemian Orphanage, Lisle, 111 

s Boys' Home, Manchester, N. H 

s Catholic Orphan Asylum, Alton, 111 

s Children's Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 

s Convent of Mercy, St. Louis, Mo 

s Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 

s Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 

s Female Orphan Asylum, Brooklyn, N. Y 

s Female Orphan Asylum, Kansas City, Mo 

s Foundling Homeand Maternity Hospital, Scran- 



German Catholic Orphan Asylum, St. Paul, 



St. John's Hospital, Red Wing, Minn.. 

St. John's Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 

St. John's Hospital, Springfield, 111 

St. John's Hospital, Springfield, Minn 

St. John's Hospital, Springfield, Mo 

St. John's Institute, San Juan, Cal 

St. John's Institute for Deaf-Mutes, St. Francis, Wis 

St. John's Long Island City Hospital, Long Island Citv, 

NY 

St. John's Lutheran Home, Mars, Pa 

St. John's Orphan Asylum, Grand Rapids, Mich 

St. John's Orphan Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa 

St. John's Orphan Asylum, Rens.?elaer, N. Y , 

St. John's Orphan Asylum, San Antonio, Tex 

St. John's Orphanage, Fargo, N. Dak 

St. John's Orphanage, Knoxville, Tenn 

St. John's Orphanage, Philadelphia, Pa 

St. John's Orphanage, Washington, D. C 

St. John's Orphanage for Boys, Baltimore, Md 

St. John's Protectory, Hicksville, Long Island, N. Y 

St. John's Protectory, West Seneca, N. Y 

St. John's Riverside Hospital, Yonkers, N. Y 

St. Johnsbury Hospital, St. Johnsbury, Vt 

St. Joseph Emergency Hospital, St. Joseph, Mo. 

St. Joseph" 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph' 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

St. Joseph 

ton, Pa . 
St. Joseph 

Minn . . . 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
• St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 



s Home, Assinins, Mich 

s Home, Beverly, N. J 

s Home, Elm Grove, Wis 

s Home, Jersey City, N. J 

s Home, Long Island City, N. Y 

s Home, New York, N. Y 

s Home, Peekskill, N. Y 

s Home, Peoria, 111 

s Home, St. Cloud, Minn 

s Home, Springfield, 111 

s Home, Stockton, Cal 

s Home, Troy, N. Y 

s Home, Wilmington, Del 

s Home and Hospital, Poi-tland, Me , 

s Home for Aged and Crippled, Chicago, 111 
s Home for Incurables, San Francisco, Cal.. 

s Home for the Aged, New York, N. Y 

s Home for the Aged, San Diego, Cal 

s_Home for the Destitute, Brownsville, Tex. 

s Home for the Friendless, Chicago, 111 

s Home for Working Girls, Plainfield, N. J . 

s Hospital, Aberdeen, Wash 

s Hospital, Ashland, Wis 

s Hospital, Baltimore, Md 

s Hospital, Bellingham, Wash 

s Hospital, Belviclere, 111 

s Hospital, Bloomington, 111 

s Hospital, Brainerd, Minn 

s Hospital, Breese, 111 

s Hospital, Chicago, 111. 

s Hospital, Chippewa Falls, Wis 

s Hospital, Concordia, Kans 

s Hospital, Deadwood, S. Dak 

s Hospital, Deerlodge, Mont 

s Hospital, Denver, Colo 

s Hospital, Elgin, 111 

s Hospital, Fort Wayne, Ind 

s Hospital, Georgetown, Colo 

s Hospital, Highland, 111 

s Hospital, Joliet, 111 

s Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 

s Hospital, Lancaster, Pa 

s Hospital, Lewiston, Idaho 

s Hospital, Lexington, Ky 

s Hospital, Logansport, Ind 



Page. 
168 
170 
144 
168 
172 
58 
304 

184 
256 
84 
116 
102 
122 
106 
122 
116 



104 
190 
212 
170 
228 
100 
68 
88 
64 
108 
278 
96 
100 
96 



82 
242 
264 
280 

98 
284 
102 
226 
240 
228 
220 
104 

62 
232 
226 
220 
248 
220 
260 
270 
280 
214 
216 
156 
214 
138 
140 
166 
140 
142 
216 
150 
208 
172 
134 
142 
146 
134 
144 
144 
170 
200 
138 
152 
146 



St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 

delphia, 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 

Mutes," ; 
St. Joseph 

Mutes, 1 
St. Joseph 

Mutes, "^ 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Josejoh 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph' 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 

fayette, 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
St. Joseph 
"St. Joseph 



s Hospital, Lorain, Ohio 

s Hospital, Mankato, jMinn 

s Hospital, Marshfield, Wis 

s Hospital, Mary ville. Mo 

s Hospital, Memphis, Tenn 

s Hospital, Menominee, Mich 

s Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 

s Hospital, New York, N. Y 

s Hospital, Omaha, Nebr 

s Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va 

s Hospital, Paterson, N. J 

s Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 

s Hospital, Phoenix, Ariz 

s Hospital, Providence, R. I 

s Hospital, Reading, Pa 

s Hospital, St. Charles, Mo 

s Hospital, St. Joseph, Mo 

s Hospital, St. Paul, Minn 

s Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 

s Hospital, Savannah, Ga 

s Hospital, South Bend, Ind 

s Hospital, Stockton, Cal 

s Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y 

s Hospital, Tacoma, Wash 

s Hospital, Vancouver, Wash 

s Hospital, West Hancock, Mich 

s Hospital, Yonkers, N. Y 

s Hospital and Sanitarium, San Diego, Cal 

s House for Homeless Industrious Boys, Phila- 

Pa 

s House of Industry, Baltimore, Md 

s House of Mercy, Worcester, Mass 

s Industrial School, Clayton, Del 

s Industrial School, Indianapolis, Ind 

s Industrial School, Vailsburg, N. J 

s Infant Asylum, Cincinnati, Ohio 

s Infant Home, Utica, N. Y 

s Infirmary, Atlanta, Ga 

s Infirmary, Fort Worth, Tex 

s Infirmary, Hot Springs, Ark 

s Infirmary, Houston, Tex 

s Infirmary, Louisville, Ky 

s Institute for the Deaf, St. Louis, Mo 

s Institute for the Improved Instruction of Deaf- 
Brooklyn, N. Y 

' s Institute for the Improved Instruction of Deaf- 
New York, N. Y 

s Institute for the Improved Instruction of Deaf- 
Westchester, N. Y 

s Male Orphan Asylum, St. Louis, Mo 

s Male Orphan Asylum, Washington, D. C 

s Maternity Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 

s Maternity Hospital, New Orleans, La 

s Mercy Hospital, Dubuque, Iowa 

s Mercy Hospital, Lyons, Iowa 

s Mercy Hospital, Sioux City, Iowa 

s Mercy Hospital, Waverly, Iowa 

s Orphan Asylum, Allegheny, Pa 

s Orphan Asylum, Baton Rouge, La 

s Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 

s Orphan Asylum, Cincinnati, Ohio 

s Orphan Asylum, Cleveland, Ohio 

a Orphan Asylum, Coldspring, Ky 

s Orphan Asylum, Erie, Pa 

s Orphan Asylum, Green Bay, Wis 

s Orphan Asylum, Jersey City, N. J 

s Orphan Asylum, Monroe, Mich 

s Orphan Asylum, New Orleans, La 

s Orphan Asylum, Paterson, N. J 

s Orphan Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa 

s Orphan Asylum, Richmond, Va 

s Orphan Asylum, Rochester, N. Y 

s Orphan Asylum, San Antonio, Tex 

s Orphan Asylum, West Seneca, N. Y 

s Orphan Asylum and Manual Labor School, La- 
Ind 

s Orphan Asylum for Girls, Krebs, Ind. T 

s Orphan Home, Columbus, Ohio 

s Orphan Home, Dayton, Ohio 

s Orphan Home, Helena, Mont 

s Orphan Home, Louisville, Ky 

s Orphanage, Dallas, Tex 

s, Orphanage, Nashua, N. H 

s Orphanage, Spokane, Wash 



Page. 
196 
166 
216 
170 
208 
164 
218 
188 
174 
216 
178 
204 
128 
208 
206 
170 
170 
168 
132 
1.38 
146 
132 
190 
214 
214 
166 
192 
130 

116 
78 
276 
62 
70 
92 
108 
104 
138 
210 
128 
210 
1.52 
300 



300 

300 
88 
62 
194 
152 
148 
148 
150 
150 
114 
74 
66 
108 
108 
72 
114 
126 
90 
84 
76 
92 
118 
124 
102 
122 
104 

70 
68 

108 

108 
88 
74 

122 
90 

126 



330 



INDEX. 



Page. 

St. Joseph's Orphanage, Washington, Ga 64 

St. Joseph's Orphanage, Wichita, Kans 72 

St. Joseph's Orphans' Home, Fall River, Mass 80 

St. Joseph' s Protectory, Pittsburg, Pa 118 

St. Joseph's Protectory for Girls, Norristown, Pa 288 

St. Joseph's Providence Orphan Asylum, Burlington, Vt... 262 

St. Joseph's Providence Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 66 

St. Joseph's Sanatorium and Hospital, Silver City, N. Mex. 178 

St. Joseph's Sanitarium, Albuquerque, N. Mex 178 

St. Joseph's School for the Deaf, Oakland, Cal. . . : 296 

St. Joseph's Technical School, Albany, N. Y 94 

St. Joseph's Temporary Home, Boston, Mass 274 

St. Katherine' s Home, Jersey City, N.J 280 

St. Louis Altenheim, St. Louis, Mo 240 

St. Louis and San Francisco Eailroad Hosjjital, Spring- 
field, Mo ;. 172 

St. Louis Baptist Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 1 70 

St. Louis Children's Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

St. Louis City Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

St. Louis Colored Orphan Asylum, St. Louis, Mo 88 

St. Louis Dispensary, St. Louis, Mo. 172 

St. Louis Female Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

St. Louis Mullanphy Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

St. Louis Newsboys' Home, St. Louis, Mo 278 

St. Louis Orphan Asylum, Louisville, Ohio 110 

St. Louis Protestant Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

St. Louis Protestant Orphan Asylum, St. Louis, Mo '. . . 88 

St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company Hospital, Texar- 

kana. Ark 128 

St. Louis Southwestern Railway Hospital, Texarkana, Tex. 210 

St. Luke's Boys' Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 108 

St. Luke's Church Home, Detroit, Mich 238 

St. Luke's Church Home for Aged Women, Philadelphia, Pa. 258 

St. Luke's Home, Raleigh, N. C 252 

St. Luke's Home, Utica, N. Y 1 250, 

St. Luke's Home and Hospital, Newburg, N. Y 188 

St. Luke's Home for Aged and Destitute Women, Middle- 
town, Conn 222 

St. Luke's Home for Aged Women, New York, N. Y 248 

St. Luke's Home for Convalescents, Boston, Mass 274 

St. Luke's Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

St. Luke's Hospital, Aberdeen, S. Dak 208 

St. Luke's Hospital, Bellingham, Wash 214 

St. Luke's Hospital, Boise, Idaho 138 

St. Luke's Hosjiital, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 148 

St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

St. Luke's Hospital, Davenport, Iowa 148 

St. Luke's Hospital, Denver, Colo 134 

St. Luke's Hospital, Duluth, Minn 166 

St. Luke's Hospital, Fergus Falls, Minn 166 

St. Luke's Hospital, Jacksonville, Fla 136 

St. Luke's Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 170 

St. Luke's Hospital, Leadville, Colo 134 

St. Luke's Hospital, Livingston, Mont 172 

St. Luke's Hospital, Marquette, Mich 164 

St. Luke's Hospital, New Bedford, Mass 160 

St. Luke's Hospital, Racine, Wis 218 

St. Luke's Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

St. Luke's Hospital, St. Paul, Minn 168 

St. Luke's Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

St. Luke's Hospital, South Bethlehem, Pa 206 

St. Luke's Hospital, Spokane, Wash 214 

St. Luke's Hospital, Utica, N. Y • 190 

St. Luke's Hospital and Dispensary, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Malachy's Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 96 

St. Margaret's Home, Red Hook, N. Y : 102 

St. Margaret's Hospital, Hammond, Ind 146 

St. Margaret's Hospital, Kansas City, Kans 150 

St. Margaret's Hospital, Montgomery, Ala 128 

St. Margaret's House for Infants, Albany, N. Y 94 

St. Margaret's Maternity Retreat, Louisville, Ky 152 

St. Mark's Home, Augusta, Me 232 

St. Mark's Home for Aged and Infirm Women, Philadel- 
phia, Pa 258 

St. Mark's Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Mark's Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah 212 

St. Martha's House, Baltimore, Md 274 

St. Mary Magdalen de Pazzi's Orphanage, Philadelphia, Pa. 118 

St. Mary of Nazareth's Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

St. Mary of the Angels, Hartsdale, N. Y 96 

St. Mary's Boys' Orphan Asylum, Rochester, N. Y 102 

St. Mary's Catholic Orphan Boys' Asylum, New Orleans, La. 76 

St. Mary's Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 96 

St. Mary's Day Nursery, Waterbury, Conn 60 



St. Mary' 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary' 
St. Mary" 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
Si. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Marv 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary' 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Marv 
St. Mary^ 
St. Marv 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 
St. Mary 



3ay, Wis 



s Female Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md 

s Female Orphan Asylum, Mobile, Ala 

s Female Orphan Asylum, St. Louis, Mo 

s Free Hospital lor Children, New York, N. Y 

s Girls' Orphan Asylum, Jersey City, N. J 

s Home, Bea verton, Oreg \ 

s Home, Cleveland, Ohio 

s Home, Erie, Pa. 

s Home, Jacksonville, Fla , 

s Home, New Bedford, Mass 

s Home, St. Paul, Oreg 

s Home, Savannah, Ga 

s Home, West Hartford, Conn 

s Home and School, Dunkirk, N. Y 

s Home for Children, Chicago, 111 

s Home for Little Colored BoySj Baltimore, Md. . . 

s Hospital, Amsterdam, N. Y 

s Hospital, Astoria, Oreg 

s Hospital, Beloitj Wis 

s Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 

s Hospital, Chilhcothe, Mo 

s Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 

s Hospital, Columbus, Nebr I 

s Hospital, Decatur, 111 . , 

s Hospital, Detroit, Mich 

s Hospital, Duluth, Minn 

s Hospital, East St. Louis, 111 

s Hospital, Evansville, Ind 

s Hospital, Grand Junction, Colo 

s Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich 

s Hospital, Hoboken, N. J 

s Hospital, Lasalle, 111 

8 Hospital, Marquette, Mich 

s Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis 

s Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn 

s Hospital, Oshkosh, Wis 

s Hospital, Passaic, N. J 

s Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 

s Hospital, Pierre, S. Dak. 

s Hospital, Pueblo, Colo 

s Hospital, Quincy, 111 

s Hospital, Rhinelander, Wis 

s Hospital, Rochester, Minn 

Hospital, Rochester, N. Y 

Hospital, Saginaw, Mich 

s Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 

s Hospital, Streator, 111 

s Hospital, Superior, Wis 

s Hospital, Wallawalla, Wash 

s Hospital and Asylum, Manitowoc, Wis 

s Hospital and Sanitarium, Tucson, Ariz 

s Infant and Maternity Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y.. 

s Infant Asylum, Boston, Mass 

s Infant Asylum, Buffalo, N. Y 

s Infirmary, Cairo, 111 

s Infirmary, Galveston, Tex 

s Infirmary, St. Louis, Mo 

s Institute, Minster, Ohio 

s Lodging House, New York, N. Y 

s Lying-in Hospital, Boston, Mass 

s Maternity and Infants' Hofiae, Brooklyn, N. Y.. 
s Maternity Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y 

Mothers and Infants' Home and Hospital, Green 



St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Galveston, Tex , 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Nashville, Tenn 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Natchez, Miss 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Norfolk, Va 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Port Jervis, N. Y 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, Vailsburg, N. J 

St. Mary's Orphan Asylum and Home for the Aged, New 

Brunswick, N. J 

St. Mary's Orphan Home, New Riegel, Ohio 

St. Mary's Orphanage, Dover, N. H 

St. Mary's Orphanage, Dubuque, Iowa 

St. Mary's Orphanage, Providence, R. I 

St. Mary's Orphans' Home, Binghamton, N. Y 

St. Mary's Springs Sanitarium, Fond du Lac, Wis 

St. Mary's Training School, Feehanville, 111 

St. Matthew's Home for Aged Women, Dallas, Tex 

St. Matthew's Home for Children, Dallas, Tex 

St. Michael's Home, Mamaroneck, N. Y 

St. Michael's Hospital, Newark, N. J 

St. Michael's Orphan Asylum, Hopewell, N. J 



112 
.286 
254 

62 
236 
112 

64 
222 



178 
198 
216 
180 
168 
194 
172 
142 
164 
166 
142 
146 
134 
164 
176 
144 
164 
218 
166 
218 
176 
204 
208 
134 
144 
218 
168 
190 
166 
132 
144 
218 
214 
264 
128 
190 



140 
210 
172 
110 
284 
158 
180 
182 

294 
122 
122 

86 
124 
102 

92 

244 

no 



120 
94 
216 
66 
260 
122 
282 
176 
90 



INDEX. 



331 



Page. 

St. Michael's Orphan Asylum, La Crosse, Wis 126 

St. Michael's Orphanage, Jersey City, N. J 90 

St. Michael's Roman Catholic German Orphanage, Pitts- 
burg, Pa - - 118 

St. Michael's Training and Industrial School, Charlotte, N. C. 106 

St. Monica's Home, Boston, Ma,ss 158 

St. Nicholas Hospital, Cripple Creek, Colo 132 

St. Nicholas Hospital, Sheboygan, Wis 218 

St. Olaf's Hospital, Austin, Minn 166 

St. Otto's Orphan Asylum, Little Falls, Minn 84 

St. Patrick's Bovs' Orphan Asylum, Grass Valley, Cal 56 

St. Patrick's Girls' Orphan Asylum, Rochester, N. Y 102 

St. Patrick's Home, Lowell, Mass 276 

St. Patrick's Home, Manchester, N. H 242 

St. Patrick's Home, San Francisco, Cal 220 

St. Patrick's Hospital, Missoula, Mont 172 

St. Patrick's Orphan Asylum, Scranton, Pa , 118 

St. Patrick's Orphanage, Watertown, N. Y , 104 

St. Patrick's Orphanage for Girls, Manchester, N. H 90 

St. Paul's Catholic Orphan Asylum, St. Paul, Minn 86 

St. Paul's Church Home, New Haven, Conn 222 

St. Paul's Church Home, Richmond, Va 124 

St. Paul's Church Home for Aged Women, Richmond, Va.. 262 

St. Paul's Free Dispensary, St. Paul, Minn 168 

St. Paul's Industrial School, Brooklyn, N. Y 96 

St. Paul's Orphan Home, Butler, Pa 114 

St. Paul' s Orphanage, Baltimore, 'Md 78 

St. Paul's Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, Idlewood, Pa. . 114 

St. Paul's Sanitarium, Dallas, Tex 210 

St. Peter Claver's Industrial School, Louisville, Ky 74 

St. Peter's Asylum for Female Children, Baltimore', Md 78 

St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' ' Home, Alle- 
gheny, Pa.. 114 

St. Peter's Female Orphan Asvlum, Wilmington, Del 62 

St. Peter's Hospital, Albany, N. Y 178 

St. Peter's Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

St. Peter' s Hospital, Charlotte, N. C 192 

St. Peter's Hospital, Helena, Mont 172 

St. Peter's Hospital, Olympia, Wash 214 

St. Peter's Orphan Asylum, Lowell, Mass 82 

St. Peter's Orphan Asylum, Newark, N. J 92 

St. Peter's Orphanage, Manchester, N. H 90 

St. Peter's Orphanage, Memphis, Tenn 122 

St. Philip's Church Home, Charleston, S. C 260 

St. Philip's Home for Industrious Boys, New York, N. Y.. 100 

St. Philip's Parish Home, New York, N. Y 248 

St. Philomena's Industrial School, St. Louis, Mo 88 

St. Pythias Sanitarium, Hot Springs, Ark 128 

St. Raphael's Home, New York, N. Y 284 

St. Raphael's Hospital, St. Cloud, M inn 168 

St. Robert's Hospital, Davenport, Iowa 148 

St. Rochus Hospital, Fort Wayne, Ind 146 

St. Rose's Free Home, New York, N. Y 248 

St. Rose's Hospital, Great Bend, Kans 150 

St. Rose's Orphan Asylum, Milwaukee, Wis 126 

St. Sophia's Home for Old People, Richmond, Va . . _ 262 

St. Thomas Hospital, Marshalltowai, Iowa 148 

St. Thomas Hospital, Nashville, Tenn 208 

St. Thomas Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

St. Thomas Orphan Asylum, Bardstown, Ky 72 

St. Timothy's Memorial Hospital and House of .Mercv, Phil- 
adelphia, Pa " 204 

St. Vincent de Paul's Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 100 

St. Vincent de Paul's Hospital and Dispensary, Norfolk, Va. 212 

St. Vincent de Paul's Infant Asylum, Providence, R. 1 120 

St. Vincent de Paul's Male Orphan Asylum, Baltimore, Md. 78 

St. Vincent's Charity Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 196 

St. Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum, Albany, N. Y 94 

St. Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum, Buffalo, N. Y 96 

St. Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum, Troy, N. Y 104 

St. Vincent's Foundling Asylum,"' Montclair, N. J 90 

St. Vincent's Girls' Orphan Asylum, Grass Valley, Cal 56 

St. Vincent's Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 96 

St. Vincent's Home, Davenport, Iowa 72 

St. Vincent's Home, Philadelphia, Pa 118 

St. Vincent's Home, Quincy, 111 226 

St. Vincent's Home, Worcester, Mass 238 

St. Vincent's Home for Girls, Elm Grove, W. Va 126 

St. Vincent's Home for Newsboys, New Orleans, La 76 

St. Vincent's Home for Working Girls, Baltimore, Md 274 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Belleville, 111 138 

St. Vincent's Hospital, BiUings, Mont 172 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Birmingham, Ala 128 



P&ge. 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Crookston, Minn 166 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Erie, Pa 200 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Green Bay, Wis 216 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Leadville, Colo 134 

St. Vincent's Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Portland, Oreg 198 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Santa Fe, N. Mex 178 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Toledo, Ohio 196 

St. Vincent's Hospital, West New Brighton, N. Y 190 

St. Vincent's Hospital, Worcester, Mass 162 

St. Vincent's Infant Asylum, Baltimore, Md 78 

St. Vincent's Infant Asylum, Chicago, 111 66 

St. Vincent's Infant Asylum, New Orleans, La 76 

St. Vincent' s Infirmary, Indianapolis, Ind 146 

St. Vincent's Infirmary, Little Rock, Ark 128 

St. Vincent's Institution, Santa Barbara, Cal 58 

St. Vincent's Male Orphan Asylum, Albany, N. Y 94 

St. Vincent's Male Orphan Asylum, Vincennes, Ind 70 

St. Vincent's Maternity Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Boston, Mass 80 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 66 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylumj Cleveland, Ohio 108 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Columbus, Ohio 108 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Denver, Colo 60 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Detroit, Mich 84 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Leavenworth, Kans 72 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Philadelphia, Pa 118 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Roanoke, Va 124 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Syracuse, N. Y 104 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Toledo, Ohio 112 

St. -Vincent's Orphan Asylum, Washington, D. C 62 

St. Vincent's Orphan Asylum for Girls, Louisville, Ky 74 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home, Fall River, Mass 80 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home, Fort Wayne, Ind 68 

St. Vincent's OrjDhan Home, Freeport, 111 66 

St. Vincent's Orphan Home, Saginaw, Mich 84 

St. Vincent's Orphanage, Manchester, N. H 90 

St. Vincent' s Orphanage, Santa Fe, N. Mex 94 

St. Vincent's Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, San Rafael, 

Cal - 58 

St. Vincent's Sanitarium, Sherman, Tex 210 

St. Zita's Home for Friendless Women, New York, N. Y... 284 

Saints' Home, Lamoni, Iowa , 230 

Salamanca Hospital Association, Salamanca, N. Y. 190 

Salem Children's Home, Salem, Mass 82 

Salem Home, Salem, N. C 252 

Salem Hospital, Salem, Mass .' 160 

Salem Hospital, Salem, Oreg 198 

Salem Orphanage, Flanagan, 111 66 

Salisbury Home for the Aged, Salisbury, Md . - 234 

Salt Lake City Quarantine Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah.. 212 

Salvation Army Bethel, Providence, R. 1 290 

Salvation Army Children's Home, St. Louis, Mo 278 

Salvation Army Day Nursery, Cincinnati, Ohio 108 

Salvation Army Day Nursery, New York, N. Y. 100 

Salvation Army Industrial Home, Baltimore, Md 274 

Salvation Army Industrial Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Salvation Army Industrial Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 280 

Salvation Army Industrial Home, New Haven, Conn 268 

Salvation Army Industrial Home, New York, N. Y 284 

Salvation Army Maternity Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

Salvation Army Mission Home, Hoboken, N. J 280 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Des Moines, Iowa 272 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Detroit, Mich 276 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Grand Rapids, Mich 276 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, New York, N. Y 284 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Omaha, Nebr 278 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, Portland, Oreg 288 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, St. Louis, Mo 278 

Salvation Army Rescue Home, St. Paul, Minn 278 

Salvation Army Rescue Home and Hospital, Spokane, Wash . 292 

Salvation Army Women's Shelter, New York, N. Y 284 

Salvation Army Working Men's Home, Cleveland, Ohio. . . 286 

Samaritan Home for the Aged, New York, N. Y 248 

Samaritan Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Samaritan Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

Samaritan Hospital, Sioux City, Iowa 150 

Samaritan Hospital and Dispensary, Troy, N. Y 190 

Samaritan Shelter, Philadelphia, Pa " 288 

Samuel F. Vilas Home, Plattsburg, N. Y 250 



332 



INDEX. 



Page. 

Samuel Prioleau Infirmary, Summerville, S. C 208 

Samuel R. Smith Infirmary, New Brighton, Staten Island 

NY : , 184 

Samuel Eeady School for Female Orphans, Baltimore, Md.. 78 

San Antonio City Hospital, San Antonio, Tex 210 

San Antonio Rescue Home, San Antonio, Tex 292 

San Bernardino Orphans' Home, San Bernardino, Cal 58 

San Diego Children's Home, San Diego, Cal 58 

San Diego Industrial School, San Diego, Cal 58 

San Francisco Ladies' Protection and Relief Society Home, 

San Francisco, Cal 266 

San Francisco Lying-in Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

San Francisco Nursery for Homeless Children, San Fran- 
cisco, Cal 58 

San, Francisco Polyclinic, San Franciscc^, Cal 132 

San Francisco Presbyterian Orphanage and Farm, San An- 

selmo, Cal 58 

San Francisco Protestant Orphan Asylum, San Francisco, 

Cal 58 

San Jose Sanitarium, San Jose, Cal 132 

San Rafael Hospital, Trinidad, Colo 134 

Sand Creek Hospital, The, Denver, Colo 134 

Sanitariuai for Hebrew Children, New York, N. Y 188 

Sanitarium Gabriels, Gabriels, N. Y 182 

Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, Santa Barbara, Cal 132 

Santa Fe Hospital, Albuquerque, N. Mex 178 

Santa Rosa Infirmary, San Antonio, Tex 210 

Sarah Ann White Home, Wilmington, Del 224 

Sarah Fuller Home, Medford, Mass 298 

Sarah Goodrich Hospital, New Orleans, La 152 

Saratoga Home for Children, Saratoga Springs, N. Y 104 

Saratoga Hospital, Saratoga Springs, N. Y 190 

Sault Ste. Marie Hospital, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich 166 

Savannah Female Asylum, Savannah, Ga 64 

Savannah Hospital, Savannah, Ga 138 

Scandinavian Old Ladies' Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 246 

Scandinavian Sailors and Immigrants' Home. Boston, Mass. 274 

Scandinavian Sailors' Temperance Home, Brooklyn, N. Y.. 280 
Scandinavian Young Women's Christian Association Home, 

Omaha, Nebr 278 

Scarritt Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 170 

Scioto County Children's Home, Portsmouth, Ohio 110 

Seattle General Hospital, Seattle, Wash 214 

Sedalia City Hospital, Sedalia, Mo 172 

Selma Hospital (colored), Selma, Ala 128 

Selma Infirmary, Selma, Ala 128 

Seton Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

Seton Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

Seton House, Troy, N.Y 284 

Seton Infirmary, Austin, Tex 210 

Settlement, The, Redlands, Cal 266 

Sharon Sanatorium, Sharon, Mass 160 

Sheboygan Home for the Friendless, Shebovgan, Wis 294 

Shelby County Children's Home, Sidney, Ohio 110 

Shelby County Emergency Hospital, Memphis, Tenn 208 

Shelter for Aged and Infirm Colored Persons, Baltimore, Md . 234 

Shelter for Colored Orphans, Philadelphia, Pa 118 

Shelter for Respectable Girls, New York, N.Y 284 

Shelter for Unprotected Girls, Syracuse, N. Y 284 

Shelter for Women, Hartford, Conn 268 

Sheltering Arms, Augusta, Ga 64 

Sheltering Arms, Houston, Tex 260 

Sheltering Arms, Minneapolis, Minn , 84 

Sheltering Arms, New York, N.Y 100 

Sheltering Arms, Norwich, Conn 222 

Sheltering Arms, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Sheltering Arms Free Hospital, Richmond, Ya 212 

Sheltering Arms Hospital, Paint Creek, W. Va 216 

Sheltering Arms Nursery, Brooklyn, N.Y 96 

Shenango Valley Hospital, Newcastle, Pa 200 

Sherman Hospital, Elgin, 111 142 

Sherman Hospital, Medford, Mass 160 

Sherman Rest Home, Chicopee, Mass 276 

Shiloh Industrial Orphanage, Augusta, Ga 64 

Shirras Dispensary, Charleston, S. C 208 

Shreveport State Charity Hospital, Shreveport, La 152 

Shurtleff Mission to the Children of the Destitute, Westfield, 

Mass 82 

Sibley Memorial Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

Silver Cross Day Nursery, New York, N.Y 102 

Silver Cross Home for Epileptics, Port Deposit, Md 234 

Silver Cross Hospital, Joliet, 111 144 

Sioux City Hospital, Sioux City, Iowa 150 

Sioux Falls Hospital, Sioux Falls, S. Dak 208 



Page. 

Sir Moses Montefiore Home, Cleveland, Ohio 252 

Sisters' Hospital, Lewiston, Me 154 

Slater Hospital, Winston-Salem, N. C 192 

Sloane Maternity Hospital, New York, N.Y 188 

Smallpox Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

Smallpox Hospital, Savannah, Ga 138 

Smith-Fox Home, Detroit, Mich 238 

Smith Memorial Home, New London, Conn 222 

Social Settlement Day Nursery, Washington, D. C 62 

Society of St. Martha, Bronxville, N. Y 94 

Sojourner Truth Home, Washington, D. C 268 

Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Milford, Nebr 242 

Soldiers and Sailors' Temporary Home, Washington, D. C. 268 

Soldiers' Home, Mountain Creek, Ala 220 

Soldiers' Home, Roseburg, Oreg 254 

Soldiers' Home in Massachusetts, Chelsea, Mass 234 

Soldiers' Home of Louisiana, New Orleans, La 232 

Soldiers' Home of North Dakota, Lisbon, N. Dak 252 

Soldiers' Orphan School, Chester Springs, Pa 114 

Soldiers' Orphans' Honie, Atchison, Kans 72 

Soldiers' Widows' Home, Wilmington, 111 228 

Solvay General Hospital, Detroit, Mich 164 

Somerset Hospital, Somerville, N. J 178 

Somerville Home for the Aged, Somerville, Mass 238 

Somerville Hospital, Somerville, Mass 160 

Sophia Little Home, Providence, R. 1 290 

Soule's Hospital, Westfield, N.-Y 190 

South Baltimore Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital, Balti- 
more, Md 156 

South Bend. General Hospital, South Bend, Wash 214 

South Carolina Institution for the Education of the Deaf and 

the Blind, Cedar Spring, S. C 302 

South Chicago Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

South Dakota Children's Home, Sioux Falls, S. Dak 120 

South Dakota School for Deaf-Mutes, Sioux Falls, S. Dak . . 302 

South Dakota School for the Blind, Garv, S. Dak 302 

South Dakota Soldiers' Home, Hot Springs, S. Dak 260 

South End Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

South End Dispensary and Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

Soijth Georgia Conference Orphans' Home, Macon, Ga 64 

South Mountain Camp Sanatorium, Montalto, Pa ' 200 

South Omaha Hospital, South Omaha, Nebr 174 

South Side Day Nursery, St. Louis, Mo 88 

South Side Dispensar_y, Chicago, 111 142 

South Side Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Southern Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

Southern Home for Destitute Children, Philadelphia, Pa. . . 118 

Southern Kansas Home for the Friendless, Parsons, Kans.. 272 

Southern Pacific Company's Hospital, San Francisco, Cal .. 132 

Southern Pacific Hospital, Sacramento, Cal 130 

Southern Tier Orphans' Home, Elmira, N . Y 96 

Southmayd Home, Waterbury, Conn 222 

Southwestern Homeopathic Hospital and Dispensary, Louis- 
ville, Ky 152 

Speer's Memorial Hospital, Dayton, Ky 150 

Spencer Hospital, Mead ville. Pa 200 

Spring Street Home, Richmond, Va 292 

Springfield Children's Home, Springfield, Mass 82 

Springfield Children's Protestant Home, Springfield, Mo. . . 88 

Springfield Dispensary, Springfield, 111 144 

Springfield Home for 'the Friendless, Springfield, 111 270 

Springfield Hospital, Springfield, 111 144 

Springfield Hospital, Springfield, Mass 162 

Springfield Rescue Mission Home, Springfield, Mass 276 

Stamford Children' s Home, Stamford, Conn 60 

Stamford Hospital, Stamford, Conn 136 

Stanberry Dispensary, Stanberry, Mo 172 

Stanford Lathrop Memorial Home, Sacramento, Cal 58 

Stapleton Day Nursery, Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y 104 

Star of Hope'Mission Home for Women, Chicago, 111 270 

Starling Medical College Free Dispensary, Columbus, Ohio. 196 

Starr Home for the Aged, Charles City, Iowa 228 

State Epileptic Colony, Abilene, Tex 260 

State Federal Soldiers' Home, St. James, Mo 240 

State Home and School, Providence, R. I 120 

State Home for Destitute and Dependent Children, Twin 

Bridges, Mont 88 

State Home for Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, and their Wives, 

Vineland, N. J 244 

State Home for the Friendless, Lincoln, Nebr 88 

State Hospital for Injured Persons of the Anthracite Coal 

Regions, Fountain Springs, Pa 200 

State Hospital for Injured Persons of the Middle Coal Field, 

Hazelton, Pa 1 - - - 200 



INDEX. 



333 



Page. 
State Hospital of the Northern Anthracite Coal Region, 

Scranton, Pa 206 

State Industrial School for Girls, Peoria, 111 68 

State Orphan Home, Corsicana, Tex 122 

State Orphans' Home, Carson Citv, Nev 88 

State PubUc School, Sparta, Wis. 1 126 

State Soldiers' Home, Bennington, Vt 262 

State Soldiers' Home, Lafa vette, Ind 228 

State Soldiers' Home, Orting, Wash 262 

State Sunshine Day Nursery, Brooklyn, N. Y 96 

State University Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa 148 

Steele Home, Chattanooga, Tenn 120 

Steele Memorial Hospital, Denver, Colo 134 

Sterling Widows' Home, Bridgeport, Conn 222 

Stetson Home, Barre, Mass. 78 

Stillwater City Hospital, Stillwater, Minn 168 

Stony Wold Sanatorium, Onchiota, N. Y 188 

Strong Emergency Hospital, Beloit, Wis 216 

Suffolk County Children's Home, Yaphank, N. Y 104 

Suffolk Hospital and Dispensary, Boston, Mass 158 

Summit County Children's Home, Akron, Ohio 106 

Sunbeam Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Sunny Bank Home, Watertown, Mass 276 

Sunnyside Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Sannyside Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Sunset Home, St. Johnsbury, Yt 262 

Sunshine Home, Hot Springs, Ark 266 

Sunshine Mission Door of Hope, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 270 

Susquehanna Valley Home, Binghamton, N. Y 94 

Sutton Home for Aged Women, Peabody, Mass 236 

Swedish Christian Orphanage, Cromwell, Conn 60 

Swedish Covenant Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Orphan Home, Cleburne, 

Kans 72 

Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home, Stanton, Iowa 72 
Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Orphans' Home and Industrial 

School, Joliet, 111 66 

Swedish Home of Mercy, Chicago, 111 226 

Swedish Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn 166 

Swedish Lutheran Immigrant Home, New York, N. Y 284 

Swedish Lutheran Orphans' Home, Andover, 111 64 

Swiss Home, New York, N. Y 284 

Sydenham Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

Syracuse City Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y 190 

Syracuse Day Nursery, Syracuse, N. Y 104 

Syracuse Free Dispensary, Syracuse, N. Y 190 

Syracuse Home for Aged Women, Syracuse, N. Y 250 

Syracuse Homeopathic Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y 190 

Syracuse Hospital for Women and Children, Syracuse, N. Y. 190 

Tabernacle Baptist Church Old Folks' Home, Augusta, Ga . 224 

Tabernacle Free Dispensary, Denver, Colo 134 

Tabernacle Home Missionary and Industrial School for 

Women, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Tabitha Home, Lincoln, Nebr 242 

Talitha Cumi Maternity Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Tamarack Mine Hospital, Calumet, Mich 162 

Tank Missionary Home, Oberlin, Ohio 286 

Tarrytown Hospital, Tarrytown, N. Y 190 

Taunton Emergency Hospital, Taunton, Mass .162 

Taylor Dixon Medical Dispensary, Georgetown, S. C 208 

Taylor Lane Hospital and Training School for Nurses, Colum- 
bia, S. C 208 

Taylor Orphan Asylum, Racine, Wis 126 

Telfair Hospital for Women, Savannah, Ga 138 

Temple Israel Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Temporary Asylum for Discharged Female Prisoners, Ded- 

hara. Mass 276 

Temporary Children's Home, Mt. Ephraim, Ohio 110 

Temporary Home, Boston, Mass 80 

Temporary Home and Day Nursery, Worcester, Mass 276 

Temporary Home for Boys, Detroit, Mich .• . . . 84 

Temporary Home for Friendless Women, Cleveland, Ohio . 286 
Temporary Home for Women and Children (North Sixth 

street), Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Temporary Home for Women and Children (South street), 

Philadelphia, Pa ; 288 

Temporary Home for Women and Children, Portland, Me . 272 
Temporary Industrial Home for Working Women, Boston, 

Mass 274 

Tennessee Baptist Orphans' Home, Nashville, Tenn ., 122 

Tennessee Children's Home, Nashville, Tenn 122 

Tennessee Confederate Soldiers' Home, Hermitage, Tenn .. 260 

Tennessee Deaf and Dumb School, Knoxville, Tenn 302 



Tennessee Odd Fellows' Home, Clarksville, Tenn. 122 

Tennessee School for the Blind, Nashville, Tenn 302 

I'erre Haute Day Nursery, Terre Haute, Ind 70 

Texas and Pacific Railway Hospital, jMarshall, Tex 210 

Texas Blind Asylum, Austin, Tex 304 

Texas Midland Railroad Hospital, Terrell, Tex 210 

Texas Rest Cottage, Pilot Point, Tex 292 

Texas School for the Deaf, Austin, Tex 304 

Thanksgiving Hospital, Cooperstown, N. Y^ 182 

Theodore Edson Orphanage, Lowell, Mass 82 

Thomas Asylum, Iroquois, N. Y 98 

Thomas Morgan Rotch, jr., Memorial Hospital for Infants, 

Boston, Mass 158 

Thomas Wilson Sanitarium for Children, Mt. AVilson, Md 156 

Thomasville Baptist Orphanage, Thomasville, N. C 106 

Thomasville Charity Hospital, Thomasville, Ga 138 

Thompson Home for Old Ladies, Detroit, Mich 238 

Thompson House, Rhinebeck, N. Y 250 

Thompson Orphanage and Training Institution, Charlotte, 

N. C 106 

Thornton Home, Evansville, Ind 228 

Thornton Orphans' Home, Petersburg, Ind 70 

Thornwell Orphanage. Chnton, S. C 120 

Thrall Hospital, Midd'letown, N. Y 184 

Tintic Hospital, Robinson, Utah 210 

Tippecanoe County Orphans' Home, Lafayette, Ind 70 

Titusville Hospital, Titusville, Pa 206 

Todd Hospital, Carlisle, Pa 198 

Toledo Boys' Home, Toledo, Ohio 112 

Toledo Day Nursery, Toledo, Ohio 112 

Toledo Dispensary, Toledo, Ohio 196 

Toledo Door of Hope, Toledo, Ohio 286 

Toledo Hospital, Toledo, Ohio 196 

Toledo Pesthouse, Toledo, Ohio 198 

Tolland County Temporary Home, Vernon, Conn 60 

Toner Institute, New Derry, Pa 114 

Topeka Orphans' Home, Topeka, Kans 72 

Touro Infirmary, New Orleans, La 152 

Training Home for Friendless Girls, Cleveland, Ohio 286 

Tremont Dispensary, Boston, Mass 158 

Tressler Orphans' Home, Loysville, Pa 114 

Trinity Chapel Home, New York, N. Y 248 

Trinity Church Home, New Haven, Conn 222 

Trinity Dispensary, Boston, Mass 158 

Trinity Dispensary, New York, N. Y 188 

Trinity Home School for Girls, St. Augustine, Fla 62 

Trinity Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

Trinity Hospital and Milwaukee Medical College Dispen- 
sary, Milwaukee, Wis 21 8 

Trinity House Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Troy Catholic Male Orphan Asvlum, Trov, N. Y 104 

Troy Hospital, Troy, N. Y ." 190 

Troy Isolation Hospital, Troy, N. Y 190 

Troy Orphan Asvlum, Troy, N. Y 104 

Truelove Home,"The, Los Angeles, Cal 266 

Trull Hospital, Biddeford, Me 154 

Trumbull County Children's Home, Warren, Ohio 112 

Tubman Home, The, Augusta, Ga 224 

Tufts College Dispensary, Boston, Mass 158 

Turney Home for Boys, Norfolk, Va 124 

Turtle Creek Municipal Hospital, Turtle Creek, Pa 206 

Tuscarawas Children's Home, Canal Dover, Ohio 106 

Tuscarawas Hospital, Canal Dover, Ohio 194 

Twenty-sixth Street Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

Twin City Hospital, WinstOn-Salem, N. C 192 

Two Harbors Hospital, Two Harbors, Minn 168 

Tyler Orphanage, Bolingbroke, Ga 64 

Tyler Street Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Uhlich Evangelical Orphan Asylum, Chicago, 111 66 

Union Benevolent Hospital , Grand Rapids, Mich 164 

Union City Mission, Minneapolis, Minn 278 

Union County Children's Home, Marysville, Ohio 110 

Union Day Nursery, Boston, Mass 80 

Union Home for Old Ladies, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

Union Hospital, Fall River, Mass 158 

Union Hospital, Ironwood, Mich 164 

Union Hospital, Lynn, Mass 160 

Union Hospital, Terre Haute, Ind 146 

Union Mission Dispensary, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

Union Printers' Home, Colorado Springs, Colo 222 

Union Protestant Infirmary, Baltimore, Md 156 

Uniontown Hospital, Uniontown, Pa 206 

Uniontown Soldiers' Orphan School, Jumonville, Pa 114 



334 



INDEX 



Page. 

United Charities Home, Wilkesbarre, Pa 290 

United Norwegian Lutheran Church Orphans' Home, Beloit, 

Iowa 72 

United Presbj-terian Memorial Hospital, Allegheny, Pa.... 198 

United Presbyterian Orphans' Home, Allegheny, Pa 114 

United States Army and General Hospital, San Francisco, Cal - 132 

United States Army Hospital, San Antonio, Tex 210 

United States Army Post Hospital, Fort Huachuca, Ariz... 128 

United States General Hospital, Fort Bayard, N. Mex *. . 178 

United States Marine Hospital, Baltimore, Md 156 

United States Marine Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

United States Marine Hospital, Cairo, 111 140 

United States Marine Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

United States Marine Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio 194 

United States Marine Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio 196 

United States Marine Hospital, Detroit, Mich 164 

United States Marine Hospital, Evansville, Ind 146 

United States Marine Hospital, Key West, Fla 136 

United States Marine Hospital, Louisville, Ky 152 

United States Marine Hospital, Memphis, Tenn 208 

United Sta,tes Marine Hospital, Mobile, Ala 128 

United States Marine Hospital, New Orleans, La 152 

United States Marine Hospital, Port Townsend, Wash 214 

United States Marine Hospital, Portland, Me 154 

United States Marine Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

United States? Marine Hospital, San Francisco, Cal 132 

United States Marine Hospital, Stapleton, Staten Island, 

N. Y , 190 

United States Marine Hospital, Vineyard Haven, Mass 162 

United States Marine Hospital, Wilmington, N. C 192 

United States Marine Hospital Sanitarium, Fort Stanton, 

N. Mex 178 

United States Naval Home, Philadelphia, Pa 258 

United States Naval Hospital, Bremerton, Wash 214 

United States Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

United States Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Mass 158 

United States Naval Hospital, Newport, E. I 206 

United States Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

United States Naval Hospital, Port Eoyal, S. C 208 

United States Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, N. H 174 

United States Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, Va 212 

United States Naval Hospital, Vallejo, Cal 132 

United States Naval Hospital, Warrington, Fla 138 

United States Naval Hospital, Washington, D. C 136 

United States Soldiers' Home, Washington, D. C 224 

United Workers' Day Nursery, Flushing, N. Y 96 

Unity House Day Nursery, Minneapolis, Minn 84 

University Free Dispensary, Minneapolis, Minn 166 

University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich 162 

University Hospital, Boulder, Colo 132 

University Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 170 

University Mound Old Ladies' Home, San Francisco, Cal . . 220 

University of Buffalo Dispensary, Buffalo, N. Y 182 

University of California Dispensary, San Francisco, Cal 132 

University of Maryland Free Lying-in Hospital, Baltimore, 

Md ■ 156 

Ursuline Orphanage, New Orleans, La 76 

Utah State School for the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind, Ogden, 

Utah 304 

Utica Dispensary, Utica, N. Y 190 

Utica General Hospital, Utica, N. Y 190 

Utica Homeopathic Hospital, Utica, N. Y 190 

Utica Hospital, Angels Camp, Cal 128 

Utica Orphan Asylum, Utica, N. Y 104 

Vallejr View Hospital, Victoria, Tex 210 

Vanderbilt Clinic, New York, N. Y 188 

Vanderburg County Orphans' Home, Evansville, Ind 68 

Vashti Blasingame Industrial Home and School, Thomas- 

ville, Ga 64 

Vassar Brothers' Home, Poughkeepsie, N. Y 250 

Vassar Brothers' Hospital, Poughkeepsie, N. Y 188 

Veatch Orphans' Home, Koekport, Ind 70 

Vermilion County Children's Home, Danville, 111 66 

Vermilion County Pesthouse, Vandercook, 111 144 

Veterans' Home of California, Yountville, Cal 222 

Victoria Home, Los Angeles, Cal 56 

Vigo County Home for Dependent Children, Terre Haute, 

Ind 70 

Vincent Memorial Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

Vine Street Orphans' Home, Chattanooga, Tenn 120 

Vinton County Children's Home, McArthur, Ohio 110 

Virginia Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Virginia Home for Incurables, Richmond, Va 262 



Page. 

Virginia Hospital, Richmond, Va 212 

Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind, Staunton, Va.. 304 

Virginia T. Smith Home for Incurables, Newington, Conn. . 60 

Volunteer Firemen's Home, Hudson, N. Y 246 

Volunteers' Children's Home, Darien, Conn 60 

W. B. Aikin Hospital, Paris, Tex 210 

Wabash Employees' Hospital, Decatur, 111 142 

Wabash Employees' Hospital, Moberly, Mo 170 

Wabash Employees' Hospital, Peru, Ind 146 

Waco City Hospital, Waco, Tex 210 

Wage Earners' Cooperative Hospital, The, Bridgeport, Conn. 134 

Wage Earners' Emergency Hospital, Providence, R. I 208 

Wakefield Home for Aged Women, Wakefield, Mass 238 

Wales Home for Aged Women, Brockton, Mass 234 

Wallawalla Hospital, Wallawalla, Wash 214 

Waltham Baby Hospital, Waltham, Mass 162 

Waltham Hospital, Waltham, Mass 162 

Wardner Hospital, Wardner, Idaho 138 

Wardwell Home for Old Ladies, Saco, Me 232 

Warner Home for Little Wanderers, St. Albans, Vt 124 

AVarner Memorial Home, Saxtons River, Vt 124 

Warren County Orphan Asylum and Children's Home, 

Lebanon, Ohio 110 

Warren Emergency Hospital, Warren, Pa „ 206 

Warrick County Orphan's Home, Boonville, Ind 68 

Wartburg Home for the Aged and Infirm, Brooklyn, N. Y. 246 

Wartburg Orphans' Farm School, Mt. Vernon, N. Y 98 

Washburn Memorial Orphan Asylum, Minneapolis, Minn.. 84 

Washington Children's Home Society, Seattle, Wash 126 

Washington City Orphan Asylum, Washington, D. C 62 

Washington County Children's Home, Crothers, Pa 114 

Washington County Children's Home, Marietta, Ohio 110 

Washington County Home for Orphan and Friendless Chil- 
dren, Hagerstown, Md 78 

Washington County Woman's Home, Marietta, Ohio 254 

W^ashington Heights Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Washington Home for Incurables, Washington, D. C 224 

Washington Home for the Blind, Washington, D. C 296 

Washington Hospital, Washington, Pa 206 

Washington Hospital for Foundlings, Washington, D. C 62 

Washington School for Defective Youth, Vancouver, Wash . 304 
Washington Square Home for Friendless Girls, New York, 

NY 284 

Washington Street Day Nursery, Somerville, Mass 82 

Washington University Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

Washingtonian Home, Boston, Mass 274 

Washingtonian Home, Chicago, 111 270 

Waterbury Day Nursery, The, Waterbury, Conn 60 

Waterbury Hospital, The, Waterbury, Conn 136 

Watkinson Farm School, Hartford, Conn 268 

Watts de Peyster Home and School for Girls, Tivoli, N. Y. 104 

Watts de Peyster Home for Invalid Children, Verbank, N. Y.. 104 

Watts Hospital, Durham, N. C ,.-.. 192 

Wayfarers' Lodge, Boston, Mass 276 

Wayfarers' Lodge, Louisville, Ky 272 

Wayfarers' Lodge No. 1, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Wavfarers' Lodge No. 2, Philadelphia, Pa 288 

Wayfarer's Rest, Covington, Ky 230 

Wayne County Children's Home, Wooster, Ohio 112 

Wayside Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Wayside Emergency Hospital, Seattle, Wash 214 

Wavside Home, Brooklyn, N. Y 282 

Wayside Inn, Grove City, Pa 254 

Webb's Academy and Home for Shipbuilders, New York, 

NY 248 

W^elcome House, Boston, Mass 276 

Wells County Orphans' Home, Bluffton, Ind 68 

Wentworth Home, West Chester, Pa 258 

Wentworth Home for the Aged, Dover, N. H 242 

Wernle Orphans' Home, Richmond, Ind 70 

Wesley Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Wesley Hospital, Chicago, 111 142 

West Jersey Homeopathic Dispensary and Hospital, Cam- 
den, N. J 176 

West Jersey Orphanage, Camden, N. J 90 

West Mountain Sanatorium, Scranton, Pa 206 

West Oakland Home, Oakland, Cal 56 

West Philadelphia Hospital for Women, Philadelphia, Pa. . 204 

West Side Cottage Day Nursery, Cleveland, Ohio 108 

West Side Cottage Dispensary, Cleveland, Ohio 196 

West Side Day Nursery, Denver, Colo 60 

West Side Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

West Side Free Dispensary, Chicago, 111 142 



INDEX. 



335 



Page. 

West Side German Dispensary, New York, N. Y 188 

West Side Hospital, Scranton, Pa 206 

West Side Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, 111 142 

West Virginia Home for Aged and Friendless Women, Wheel- 
ing, W; Va 264 

West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind, Romnev, 

W. Va 1. 304 

Westchester Temporary Home, White Plains, N. Y 104 

Western Home for Poor Children, Philadelphia, Pa 118 

Western New York Institution for Deaf-Mutes, Rochester, 

N. Y 300 

Western New York Society for the Protection of Homeless 

and Dependent Children, Randolph, N. Y 102 

Western Pennsylvania Hospital, Pittsburg, Pa 204 

Western Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the 

Deaf and Dumb, Pittsburg, Pa. 302 

Western Temporary Home, Philadelphia, Pa 290 

Westfield Home for Aged People, Westfield, Mass 238 

Westmoreland Children's Home, Greensburg, Pa 114 

Westmoreland H ospital, Greensburg, Pa 200 

Wheeling Hospital, Wheeling, W. Va 216 

Whidden Memorial Hospital, Everett, Mass 158 

White Cloud Hospital and Sanitarium, White Cloud, Mich. 166 

White County Orphans' Home, Monticello, Ind 70 

White Cross Sanitarium, Jackson, Mich 164 

White Plains Hospital, White Plains. N. Y 190 

White Shield Home, Tacoma, Wash 292 

White's Indiana Manual Labor Institute, Treaty, Ind 70 

Whitehall Orphans' Home, Whitehall, 111 68 

Whosoever Rescue Home, Philadelphia, Pa 290 

Wichita Children's Home, Wichita, Kans 72 

Wichita Hospital, Wichita, Kans 150 

Wichita Rescue Home, Wichita, Kans 272 

Widows and Old Men's Home, Cincinnati, Ohio 252 

Widows and Orphans' Home, Batesville, Ark 220 

Widows and Orphans' Home, St. Louis, Mo 240 

Widows' Home, Augusta, Ga 224 

Widows' Home (Market street), Hartford, Conn 222 

Widows' Home (South Hudson street) , Hartford, Conn 222 

Widows' Home (210 Windsor av.enue), Hartford^ Conn 222 

Widows' Home (216 Windsor avenue), Hartford, Conn 222 

Widows' Home, Hoboken, N.J 242 

Wilkes Dispensary, New York, N. Y 188 

Wilkesbarre City Hospital, Wilkesbarre, Pa 206 

Willard Home, Utica, N. Y 284 

Willard Hospital, Bedford, Mass 156 

Willard Parker Hospital, New York, N. Y 188 

William Euston Home, Charleston, S. C 260 

William L. Gilbert Home, The, Winsted, Conn 60 

Wm. McKinley Memorial Hospital, Trenton, N. J 178 

William Raymond Champlin Memorial Home, Chicago, 111. 66 
WiUiam Small Memorial Home for Aged Women, Leaven- 
worth, Kans 230 

William T. Carter Junior Republic, Redington, Pa. 118 

William W. Backus Hospital, The, Norwich, Conn 136 

William Wood's Hospital, Osage, Iowa 150 

Williamsburg Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y 180 

Williamsport Hospital, Williamsport, Pa 206 

Willing Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 118 

Wills Hospital , Philadelphia, Pa 204 

AVilHon Children's Home, West Union, Ohio 112 

Wiiiclicstcr Home for Aged Women, Boston, .Mass 234 

Winchc^^t t'l- ^lemorial Hospital, Winchester, Va 214 

Winilham County Temporary Home, Putnam, Conn 60 

Winfield Hospital, Winfleld, Kans 150 

Wing Settlement, Colorado Springs, Colo 266 

Winifred Day Nursery, New York, N. Y 102 

Winona General Hospital, Winona, Minn 168 

\'\"inter Quarters Hospital, Winter Quarters, Utah 212 

Wisconsin School for the Blind, Jauesville, Wis 304 

Wisc< msin School for the Deaf, Delavan, Wis .304 

Wisconsin Veterans' Home, Waupaca, Wis 264 

Wise Memorial Hospital, Omaha, Nebr 174 



Page. 

Woburn Home for Aged Men, Woburn, Mass 238 

Woman's Aid Society Home, Hartford, Conn 268 

Woman's Charity Club Hospital, Boston, Mass 158 

Woman's Christian Association Home, Syracuse, N. Y 284 

Woman's Christian Association Hospital, Council Bluffs, 

Iowa , 148 

Woman's Christian Association Hospital, Jamestown, N. Y. 182 

Woman's Christian Home, Lafayette, Ind 270 

Woman's Christian Home, St. Paul, Minn 278 

Woman's Christian Temperance Union Home, Fargo, 

N. Dak 286 

Woman's Christian Temperance Union Hospital, Kearnev, 

Nebr '.. 174 

W. C. T. U. Mercy Home, Manchester, N. H 278 

Woman's Clinic, Washington, D. C 136 

Woman's Clinical Dispensary, Chicago, 111 142 

Woman's Dispensary, Washington, D. C 136 

Woman's Home, Bay City, Mich..., 238 

Woman's Home, Dallas, Tex 292 

Woman's Home and Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich 238 

Woman's HomeoiDathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa 204 

Woman's Hospital, Nashville, Tenn 208 

Woman's Hospital, Saginaw, Mich 166 

Woman's Hospital, St. Louis, Mo 172 

Woman's Hospital and Infants' Home, Detroit, Mich 164 

Woman's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, 111 142 

Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa , 204 

Woman's League Day Nursery, Washington, D. C 62 

Woman's Relief Corps Home, Evergreen, Cal 220 

Woman's Relief Home, Palestine, Tex 292 

Woman's Sheltering and Protection Home, Oakland, Cal. .. 266 

Woman's Southern Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. 204 

Women and Girls' Boarding Home, Springfield, Ohio 286 

Women's Aid Home, Manchester, N. H 278 

Women's and Children's Free Dispensary, Cleveland, Ohio. 196 

Women's and Children's Hospital, Kansas City, Mo 170 

Women's Christian Association Home, Washington, D. C 268 

Women's Union Day Nursery, Philadelphia, Pa 118 

Woodland Home for Orphans and Friendless, Quincy, 111.. 68 

Woody Crest, Tarrytown, N. Y 104 

Woolsey Orphan Home, Tacoma, Wash 126 

Woonsocket Dav Nursery and Children's Home, Woon- 

socket, R. I..1 120 

Woonsocket Hospital, Woonsocket, R. I 208 

Worcester Children's Friend Society, Worcester, Mass 82 

Worcester City Hospital and Dispensary, Worcester, Mass. . 162 
Worcester Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Infirmary, Worces- 
ter, INIass 162 

Worcester Hahnemann Hospital, Worcester, Mass 162 

Worcester Isolation Hospital, Worcester, Mass 162 

Workers' Creche, Chicago, 111 66 

Working Boys' Home, Boston, Mass 80 

Working Boys' Home (Franklin street), Buffalo, N. Y 96 

Working Boys' Home (Niagara 'square), Buffalo, N. Y 96 

Working Boys' Home, Washington, D. C 62 

Workingmen's Hospital, Berhn, Pa 198 

Workingmen's Metropole, Portland, Oreg 288 

Wyoming General Hospital, Rock Springs, Wyo 218 

Wyoming Soldiers and Sailors' Home, Buffalo, Wyo 264 

Yonkers City Hospital, Yonkers, N. Y 192 

Yonkers Homeopathic Hospital and Maternity, Yonkers, 

N. Y 192 

York Hospital and Dispensary, York, Pa 206 

Young Woman's Home, New York, N. Y 284 

Young Women's Home, Lewiston, Me 272 

Young Women's Union Nursery and Home, Philadelphia, 

Pa 118 

Youngstown Hospital, Youngstown, Ohio 198 

Youth's Directory, San Francisco, Cal 58 

Zanesville City Hospital, Zanesville, Ohio 198 



it 06 




9 




Mffi 


Jfi^^Si^^^^^S 


M 


BKR 




^|K^H^^^^^^^^^H& 1 


^flfl 








|^^^^^|V^^^H 


^^^^^^R^^^H^H 




feM 



LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 

lilililililiM 

020 754 171 



I 




